Content:

CL – Climate: Past, Present & Future

CL1.1 – Studying the climate of the last two millennia

EGU21-10979 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Advancing community-led research into the climate of the Common Era

Sarah S. Eggleston, Steven Phipps, Oliver Bothe, Helen V. McGregor, Belen Martrat, Hans Linderholm, Bronwen Konecky, Nerilie Abram, and Scott St. George

The past two thousand years is a key interval for climate science. This period encompasses both the era of human-induced global warming and a much longer interval when changes in Earth’s climate were governed principally by natural drivers and unforced variability. Since 2009, the Past Global Changes (PAGES) 2k Network has brought together hundreds of scientists from around the world to reconstruct and understand the climate of the Common Era using open and collaborative approaches to palaeoclimate science, including virtual meetings. The third phase of the network will end in December 2021. Here we highlight some key outputs of PAGES 2k and present the major themes and scientific questions emerging from recent surveys of the community. We explore how these might boost a new phase of PAGES 2k or a successor project(s). This year we will further reach out to the community through Town Hall consultations, vEGU and other meetings, and a PAGES 2k global webinar series. The aim of these activities is to foster development of post-2021 community-led PAGES initiatives that connect past and present climate.

How to cite: Eggleston, S. S., Phipps, S., Bothe, O., McGregor, H. V., Martrat, B., Linderholm, H., Konecky, B., Abram, N., and St. George, S.: Advancing community-led research into the climate of the Common Era, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10979, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10979, 2021.

EGU21-6663 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Climate of Moscow at the end of Little Ice Age

Mikhail A. Lokoshchenko

Better understanding of current climate changes needs a full knowledge about regional specific of thermal conditions at the end of Little Ice Age. So, the earliest available meteorological data are important. First regular daily qualitative meteorological observations were taken in Moscow city from 1657 to 1675. Episodic short series of instrumental measurements were made there for the first time in 1731; regular daily measurements started in 1779 when one of Mannheim network stations was founded in Moscow.

         All known old data series of the air temperature T measurements in Moscow since 1779 were collected and analyzed. Mannheim station existed there from 1779 to 1797 but average values of T are available from issues of Ephemerides Societatis Meteorologicae Palatinae only for the period 1779–1792. High accuracy of measurements at Mannheim network is confirmed by high correlation co-efficient between monthly-averaged T values in Moscow and at closest stations (Warsaw and St. Petersburg): up to 0.82-0.84 on separate months.

         Different methodical questions (unknown location of the station, unknown conditions of thermometer installation, its height and shading, an accuracy of its calibration, etc.) were studied. As a result it was found that the most probable error due to thermometer installation close to the northern building wall is ±0.1÷0.2 ºС; the error of daily-averaged T due to unknown height of measurements is ±0.1 ºС; the calibration accuracy in Mannheim was about ±0.1 ºС. Thus, a total error of T on average of a day in the 18th century was not higher than ±0.3÷0.4 ºС. Probably it was even less because separate components of the error may be multidirectional. For the first time mean-annual T in Moscow was received for 1783, and the most probable values were estimated for 1784 and 1785 using the data of the closest Mannheim station (Saint-Petersburg) for separate months with data gaps. The end of Little Ice Age manifeted at extremely low minimal values of T: up to –31 ˚R (–38.8 ˚С) in December 17th, 1788. However, thermal conditions from June to September changed only a bit since the 18th century till nowadays (differences are not statistically significant with the 0.95 confidence probability).  

         Later measurements in Moscow were renewed since 1808 and broken again in August of 1812 due to Napoleon’s invasion and terrible Moscow fire. For the first time unknown data series of everyday measurements which were made by Ivan Lange in 1816–1817 were found and studied. As is known the famous 1816 ‘Year Without a Summer’ was noted almost all over the World by extremely cold summer as probable result of Mount Tambora eruption in 1815. Nevertheless, it was found that summer of 1816 in Moscow was comparatively cool but not extremely cold: monthly-averaged T there was 15.7, 17.3 and 14.5 ˚С in June, July and August, respectively, and 15.8 ˚С on average of the summer. Thus, 1816 occupies only 27th place among the coldest summers in the city during 216 years.

         Author is thankful to the memory of his late PhD student Ekaterina L. Vasilenko.

How to cite: Lokoshchenko, M. A.: Climate of Moscow at the end of Little Ice Age, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6663, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6663, 2021.

EGU21-11953 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Analysis of Subdaily Meteorological Measurements by Louis Morin in the Late Maunder Minimum 1665 – 1709 in Paris

Thomas Pliemon, Ulrich Foelsche, Christian Rohr, and Christian Pfister

Based on copies of the original data (source: Oeschger Center for Climate Change Research) we perform climate reconstructions for Paris between 1665 - 1709. The focus lies on the following meteorological variables: temperature, cloudiness, direction of movement of the clouds, precipitation and humidity. Apart from humidity, these meteorological variables were measured three times a day over the entire period from Louis Morin. Temperature and humidity were measured with instruments, whereas cloud cover, direction of movement of the clouds and precipitation were measured in a descriptive manner. In addition to the quantitative temperature measurements, conclusions about synoptic air movements over Europe are possible due to the additional meteorological variables. The Late Maunder Minimum is characterised by cold winters and moderate summers. Winter is characterised by a lower frequency of westerly direction of movement of the clouds. This reduction of advection from the ocean leads to cooling in Paris and also to less precipitation in winter. This can be seen very strongly between the last decade of the 17th century (cold) and the first decade of the 18th century (warm). A lower frequency of westerly direction of movement of the clouds can also be seen in summer, but the influence is stronger in winter than in summer. However, this reduction leads to moderate/warm temperatures in summer. So unusually cold winters in the Late Maunder Minimum can be attributed to a lower frequency of westerly direction of movement of the clouds.

How to cite: Pliemon, T., Foelsche, U., Rohr, C., and Pfister, C.: Analysis of Subdaily Meteorological Measurements by Louis Morin in the Late Maunder Minimum 1665 – 1709 in Paris, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11953, 2021.

EGU21-15903 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Global Instrumental Meteorological Database Before 1890 – a useful overview

Elin Lundstad, Yuri Brugnera, and Stefan Brönnimann

This work describes the compilation of global instrumental climate data with a focus on the 18th and early 19th centuries. This database provides early instrumental data recovered for thousands of locations around the world. Instrumental meteorological measurements from periods prior to the start of national weather services are designated “early instrumental data”. Much of the data is taken from repositories we know (GHCN, ISTI, CRUTEM, Berkeley Earth, HISTALP). In addition, many of these stations have not been digitized before. Therefore,  we provide a new global collection of monthly averages of multivariable meteorological parameters before 1890 based on land-based meteorological station data. The product will be form as the most comprehensive global monthly climate data set, encompassing temperature, pressure, and precipitation as ever done. These data will be quality controlled and analyzed with respect to climate variability and they be assimilated into global climate model simulations to provide monthly global reconstructions. The collection has resulted in a completely new database that is uniform, where no interpolations are included. Therefore, we are left with climate reconstruction that becomes very authentic. This compilation will describe the procedure and various challenges we have encountered by creating a unified database that can later be used for e.g. models. It will also describe the strategy for quality control that has been adopted is a sequence of tests.

How to cite: Lundstad, E., Brugnera, Y., and Brönnimann, S.: Global Instrumental Meteorological Database Before 1890 – a useful overview, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15903, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15903, 2021.

EGU21-589 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Long-Term Global Ground Heat Flux and Continental Heat Storage from Geothermal Data

Francisco José Cuesta-Valero, Almudena García-García, Hugo Beltrami, J. Fidel González-Rouco, and Elena García-Bustamante

Energy exchanges among climate subsystems are of critical importance to determine the climate sensitivity of the Earth's system to changes in external forcing, to quantify the magnitude and evolution of the Earth's energy imbalance, and to make projections of future climate. Additionally, climate phenomena sensitive to land heat storage, such as permafrost stability and sea level rise, are important due to their impacts on society and ecosystems. Thus, ascertaining the magnitude and change of the Earth's energy partition within climate subsystems has become urgent in recent years. 

Here, we provide new global estimates of changes in ground surface temperature, ground surface heat flux and continental heat storage derived from geothermal data using an expanded database and new techniques developed in the last two decades. This new dataset contains 253 recent borehole profiles that were not included in previous estimates of global continental heat storage. In addition, our analysis considers additional sources of uncertainty that were not included in previous borehole studies. Results reveal markedly higher changes in ground heat flux and heat storage within the continental subsurface during the second half of the 20th century than previously reported, with a land mean temperature increase of 1 K and continental heat gains of around 12 ZJ relative to preindustrial times. Half of the heat gained by the continental subsurface since 1960 have occurred in the last twenty years. These results may be important for estimates of climate sensitivity based on energy budget constrains, as well as for the evaluation of global transient climate simulations in terms of the Earth’s heat inventory and energy-dependent subsurface processes. Our estimate of land heat storage is included in the new assessment of the components of the Earth’s heat inventory recently released (von Schuckmann et al. 2020), together with the oceans, the atmosphere and the cryosphere.

How to cite: Cuesta-Valero, F. J., García-García, A., Beltrami, H., González-Rouco, J. F., and García-Bustamante, E.: Long-Term Global Ground Heat Flux and Continental Heat Storage from Geothermal Data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-589, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-589, 2021.

EGU21-9222 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Assessing Arctic Ground Surface Temperatures from Borehole Temperatures and Paleoclimatic Model Simulations

Hugo Beltrami, Fracisco José Cuesta-Valero, Almudena García-García, Stephan Gruber, and Fernando Jaume-Santero

The surface temperature response to changes in our planet’s external forcing is larger at higher latitudes, a phenomenon known as polar amplification. The Arctic amplification has been particularly intense during the last century, with arctic-wide paleoclimatic reconstructions and state-of-the-art model simulations revealing a twofold arctic warming in comparison with the average global temperature increase. As a consequence, Arctic ground temperatures respond with rapid warming, but this response varies with snow cover and permafrost processes. Thus, changes in arctic ground temperatures are difficult to reconstruct from data, and to simulate in climate models.

Here, we reconstruct the ground surface temperature histories of 120 borehole temperature profiles above 60ºN for the last 400 years. Past surface temperature evolution from each profile was estimated using a Perturbed Parameter Inversion approach based on a singular value decomposition method. Long-term surface temperature climatologies (circa 1300 and 1700 CE) and quasi-steady state heat flow are also estimated from linear regression through the depth range 200 to 300 m of each borehole temperature profile. The retrieved temperatures are assessed against simulated ground surface temperatures from five Past Millennium and five Historical experiments from the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project Phase III (PMIP3), and the fifth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) archives, respectively.

Preliminary results from borehole estimates and PMIP3/CMIP5 simulations reveal that changes in recent Arctic ground temperatures vary spatially and are related to each site’s earlier thermal state of the surface. The magnitudes of ground warming from data and simulations differ with large discrepancies among models. As a consequence, a better understanding of freezing processes at and below the air-ground interface is necessary to interpret subsurface temperature records and global climate model simulations in the Arctic.

How to cite: Beltrami, H., Cuesta-Valero, F. J., García-García, A., Gruber, S., and Jaume-Santero, F.: Assessing Arctic Ground Surface Temperatures from Borehole Temperatures and Paleoclimatic Model Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9222, 2021.

EGU21-8323 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Accounting for small bipolar magnetic regions in solar irradiance reconstructions

Bernhard Hofer, Natalie A. Krivova, Sami K. Solanki, Robert Cameron, Chi-Ju Wu, and Ilya G. Usoskin

Historical solar irradiance is a critical input to climate models. As no direct measurements are available before 1978, reconstructions of past irradiance changes are employed instead. Such reconstructions are based on the knowledge that solar irradiance on time scales of interest to climate studies is modulated by the evolution of the solar surface magnetic structures, such as sunspots and faculae. This calls for historical records or proxies of such features. The longest direct, and thus mostly used, record is the sunspot number. It allows a reasonable description of the emergence and evolution of active regions, which are larger magnetic regions containing sunspots. At the same time, a significant amount of the magnetic flux on the Sun emerges in the form of the so-called ephemeral magnetic regions, which are weaker short-lived bipolar regions that do not contain sunspots. Due to their high frequency, ephemeral regions are an important source of the irradiance variability, especially on time scales longer than the solar cycle. Difficulties in their proper accounting are a main reason for the high uncertainty in the secular irradiance variability. Existing models either do not account for their evolution at all or link them linearly to active regions. We use a new, more realistic model of the ephemeral region emergence, relying on recent independent solar observations, as input to a surface flux transport model (SFTM) to simulate the evolution of the magnetic field in such regions. The latter can then be used to reconstruct the solar irradiance since the Maunder minimum.

How to cite: Hofer, B., Krivova, N. A., Solanki, S. K., Cameron, R., Wu, C.-J., and Usoskin, I. G.: Accounting for small bipolar magnetic regions in solar irradiance reconstructions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8323, 2021.

EGU21-1893 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Late-Holocene climate variability of coastal East Asia reconstructed from the Yongneup fen in central Korea

Jinheum Park, Qiuhong Jin, Jieun Choi, and Jungjae Park

This study presents a reconstruction of climate change in central Korea during the last 3,000 years, using a core from a montane peatland of Yongneup. Multiple proxies of pollen, macrocharcoal, and geochemistry were analysed to provide three findings as follows: First, abrupt climate events at ca. 2.8 and 2.3 ka BP possibly accompanied dry summer as well as cold and arid winter seasons on the Korean peninsula. The first macrocharcoal analysis on the peninsula indicates increased wildfire activities during these dry periods. Next, a weakening of summer monsoon during El Niño-like phases was clearly found during the late Holocene. This confirms previous findings of a dominant oceanic influence on hydroclimate variability on the Korean peninsula. Finally, changes in temperature were likely synchronous with a global trend, indicated by the total organic content (TOC) and arboreal pollen percentages. Due to its location at a high-altitude, the environment of Yongneup has possibly sensitively responded to fluctuations in temperature. Altogether, these findings suggest that temperature and precipitation changes on the Korean peninsula have been separately influenced by insolation and oceanic circulations, respectively.

How to cite: Park, J., Jin, Q., Choi, J., and Park, J.: Late-Holocene climate variability of coastal East Asia reconstructed from the Yongneup fen in central Korea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1893, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1893, 2021.

EGU21-2789 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Oxygen isotopic evidence of climate variability in southern England since the Medieval Period.

Joanna Tindall, Jonathan Holmes, Ian Candy, Melanie Leng, Kira Rehfeld, Louise Sime, Irene Malmierca Vallet, Thierry Fonville, Pete Langdon, and David Sear

Late Holocene climatic variations pre-1850 CE are associated with volcanic and solar forcing (Schurer et al., 2013).  Whilst these variations are recorded in speleothems and ice-cores, these archives are often spatially restricted leaving gaps in our knowledge about short-term climate variability in a range of regions. Here, we investigate the potential of using the high-resolution δ18O analysis of lake carbonates formed within artificially constructed water bodies dating back to the Medieval period. Whilst the isotopic analysis of lake carbonates is a well-established Quaternary palaeoclimate proxy (Leng and Marshall, 2004) it has received less attention as a tool for climate reconstruction over the historic period. In this study we use the δ18O analysis of winter calcifying ostracod species from lake sediments recovered from Medieval fishponds from the town of Alresford, in southern England, combined with a programme of monitoring within the present-day water body to establish the hydrology and thermal regime of the system. This analysis shows that over the studied interval (the end of the Medieval period through to the 20th century) the lake system underwent regular inter-annual/decadal isotopic shift of relatively high magnitude (1-2‰).

In order to investigate whether these high magnitude δ18O fluctuations are explainable by climatic variability or are a result of intra-lake processes we provide a data-model comparison. This approach allows an understanding of the likely mechanistic drivers of climatic change as well as testing if proxy observations are consistent with modelled outputs (Evans et al., 2013). This study compares the δ18O ostracod record with a synthetic δ18Ocarbonate record derived from the Millennium Data iHadCM3 runs for the period 1200 CE to 1850 CE. The iHadCM3 model generates modelled values for temperature and δ18Oprecipitation on an annual and monthly basis. These data were used to produce a synthetic δ18Ocarbonate record on both an annual and seasonal basis using Kim and O’Neil's (1997) equation that describes the relationship between temperature, δ18Ocarbonate and δ18Olakewater.

The preliminary outputs of this proxy-model output comparison demonstrate that the magnitude of δ18Ocarbonate variability predicted by the model data is similar to the magnitude of change recorded in the proxy data. This suggests that these variations are real and driven by climatic rather than catchment-specific processes. Ongoing work aims to disentangle primary climate drivers of interannual δ18O change, at this site, using δ18O enabled climate model simulations. Our approach of considering what drives interannual δ18O changes over the last few hundred years, in these lacustrine settings, will help enable more robust palaeoclimatic reconstructions from these records.

References: Evans, M.N. et al., (2013), QSR, 76, pp.16–28.; Kim, S.-T. and O’Neil, J.R. (1997) Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 61(16), pp.3461–3475; Leng, M.J. and Marshall, J.D. (2004) QSR, pp.811–831; Schurer, A.P. et al., (2013) Journal of Climate, 26(18), pp. 6954–6973.

How to cite: Tindall, J., Holmes, J., Candy, I., Leng, M., Rehfeld, K., Sime, L., Malmierca Vallet, I., Fonville, T., Langdon, P., and Sear, D.: Oxygen isotopic evidence of climate variability in southern England since the Medieval Period., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2789, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2789, 2021.

EGU21-3748 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Pacific Walker circulation variability during the last millennium reconstructed from a network of water isotope proxy records

Georgina Falster, Bronwen Konecky, Sloan Coats, Samantha Stevenson, and Midhun Madhavan

Changes in the strength of the Pacific Walker circulation (PWC) can have a significant impact on global mean surface temperatures, as well as regional temperature, precipitation, and extreme weather events far beyond the tropical Pacific. Understanding PWC variability is therefore important for constraining future climate. But observational records of the PWC are short, and single-site proxy records for changes in the strength of the PWC during the last millennium offer contrasting interpretations. This leaves a critical gap in our understanding of PWC variability on the decadal to centennial timescales relevant to future climate change.

Falster et al. (in prep.) demonstrated that the PWC is strongly imprinted in modern global precipitation δ18O (δ18OP). This relationship arises via multiple complementary mechanisms, including but not limited to ENSO dynamics. We exploit this relationship to reconstruct changes in the strength of the PWC over the past millennium, using six different statistical and machine learning reconstruction methods in conjunction with a globally-distributed network of palaeo-δ18OP records (Konecky et al. 2020). Although δ18OP from a relatively small number of locations explains a large proportion of PWC variance in the calibration interval, we use a larger network of sites because larger networks are less susceptible to non-stationary teleconnections or non-signal biases than individual sites or smaller networks. 

Preliminary results indicate that reconstructed PWC variability is coherent across methods, particularly for the past 400 years. Our reconstructions are also robust to both the calibration window used, and the particular palaeo-δ18OP records included in the reconstruction. This provides confidence that our network comprises sufficient proxy timeseries i.e. that we successfully extracted the common underlying climate signal (the PWC) from site-specific information inherent in individual palaeo-δ18OP records. Thus, we are confident that our reconstruction of changes in the strength of the PWC through the last millennium is robust, and it will therefore help to constrain the PWC’s long-term internal variability and sensitivity to external forcing.


References:

Falster, G. M., B. Konecky, M. Madhavan, S. Coats, S. Stevenson. 2021. “Imprint of the Pacific Walker circulation in global precipitation δ18O”. In preparation for Journal of Climate

Konecky, B. L., N. P. McKay, O. V. Churakova (Sidorova), L. Comas-Bru, E. P. Dassié, K. L. DeLong, G. M. Falster, et al. 2020. “The Iso2k Database: A Global Compilation of Paleo-δ18O and δ2H Records to Aid Understanding of Common Era Climate.” ESSD. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2020-5.

How to cite: Falster, G., Konecky, B., Coats, S., Stevenson, S., and Madhavan, M.: Pacific Walker circulation variability during the last millennium reconstructed from a network of water isotope proxy records, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3748, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3748, 2021.

EGU21-6292 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Impact of fires, earthquakes, and climate on catchment response since 600 CE, Pallett Creek, San Gabriel Mountains, Southern California USA

Katherine Scharer, Jenifer Leidelmeijer, Matthew Kirby, Nicole Bonuso, and Devin McPhillips

In tectonically active regions, sedimentary records are overprinted by landscape response to climate, fire, and local earthquakes.  We explore this issue using a new paleoclimate record developed at the Pallett Creek paleoseismic site in southern California USA, a recently incised distal fan located along the San Andreas Fault at the base of a 35 km2 catchment in the San Gabriel Mountains.  To date, we have analyzed 6 m of section, spanning the last 1300 yr, for grain size, total organic material (TOM), carbon/nitrogen (C/N) ratios, magnetic susceptibility, and charcoal count. Existing C-14 dates (Scharer et al., 2011) inform rates of sediment deposition and charcoal accumulation (CHAR). Additional dating and macrofossil analysis is ongoing.  Sedimentological variability within the section is dominated by two general units. Unit 1 is characterized by high % clay, % silt, and % TOM, while Unit 2 is distinctly coarser with higher % sand and lower % TOM.  Pulses of high CHAR occur from 1150-1260 yr BP and during the Little Ice Age (100-500 yr BP) and are associated with high sedimentation rates (0.3-2 cm/yr), while only a few relatively weak fire episodes are recorded in the Medieval Climate Anomaly (700-1000 yr BP), despite similarly high sedimentation rates (0.6 cm/yr).  Ten earthquakes documented at the site (Sieh et al., 1989) occurred about every 135 years and impart no obvious short-term impact on sedimentation rates, perhaps reflecting the distance between the site and steeper portions of the drainage network (>4 km) likely to produce mass wasting.  Overall, the landscape response of this large, integrated catchment appears to reflect a stronger influence of fire and climate than earthquakes. Future work will focus on the impact of the fire episodes on sediment delivery and resultant paleoearthquake ages.

How to cite: Scharer, K., Leidelmeijer, J., Kirby, M., Bonuso, N., and McPhillips, D.: Impact of fires, earthquakes, and climate on catchment response since 600 CE, Pallett Creek, San Gabriel Mountains, Southern California USA, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6292, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6292, 2021.

EGU21-8550 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Marine records of Holocene glacier variability in the Kerguelen Islands (South Indian Ocean): sedimentology, chronology, and paleoclimatic drivers

Léo Chassiot, Emmanuel Chapron, Elisabeth Michel, Vincent Favier, Vincent Jomelli, Joanna Charton, Deborah Verfaillie, and Xavier Crosta

The strength and the location of Southern Hemisphere winds (SHW) define an annular mode (SAM), a major component of interannual climatic variability in the Southern Hemisphere. SAM has a significant impact on mid-latitude westerly winds, but also acts on the meridional moisture transport over the Southern Ocean (for example, in the case of atmospheric rivers), with dramatic consequences on the cryosphere at high latitudes. Assessment of past, present and future changes in the SAM is essential for understanding climate variations and impacts at high latitudes. To date, Holocene proxy-based reconstructions of SAM are limited to South America, Australia/New Zealand, and Antarctica. In opposite, the paucity of SAM-related records for the Southern Indian Ocean presently limits our understanding of the spatial and temporal extent of SHW behavior in this region.

To this aim, we present a series of 30-m long marine records retrieved from a fjord fed by glacial melt of the Ampere glacier belonging to the Cook Ice Cap in the Kerguelen Archipelago (49˚20’S, 69˚20’E). A new chronological framework, based on Bayesian modelling of 50 radiocarbon ages along with 137Cs and 210Pb measures, allows reconstructing 4 kyrs of sediment discharge related to glacier variability. Sedimentological and geochemical analyses from XRF and GEOTEK core scanners highlight (i) a regional tephra at 950 cal BP; (ii) regular occurrences of floods during the LIA; and (iii) a background sedimentation related to glacial flour inputs through hypo- and hyperpycnal flows favoring very high sedimentation rates (1-2 cm.a-1) in the fjord. Phases of glacier advances and retreats linked to moisture transport by SHW are reflected by fluctuations in sedimentological and geochemical signals, and correlated with moraines dating on land. Over the past 4 kyrs, four cycles of glacier advances/retreats can be evidenced, reflecting wet/dry periods in response to shifts in the position and changes in magnitude of the SHW, associated with moisture transport and precipitation in the Southern Indian Ocean. On centennial timescales, wet/dry periods inferred from Kerguelen are in-phase with Holocene SAM-related records from South America and Tasmania over the last 2 kyrs, suggesting the long-term glacier dynamic at Kerguelen is also related to a centennial expression of SAM.

Acknowledgments : Marion Dufresne Crew, ARTEMIS program, UGA-ARCA.

How to cite: Chassiot, L., Chapron, E., Michel, E., Favier, V., Jomelli, V., Charton, J., Verfaillie, D., and Crosta, X.: Marine records of Holocene glacier variability in the Kerguelen Islands (South Indian Ocean): sedimentology, chronology, and paleoclimatic drivers, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8550, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8550, 2021.

EGU21-13653 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Planktic Foraminifera changes in the western Mediterranean Anthropocene

Sven Pallacks, Patrizia Ziveri, Belen Martrat, Graham P. Mortyn, Michael Grelaud, Ralf Schiebel, Alessandro Incarbona, Jordi Garcia-Orellana, and Griselda Anglada-Ortiz

The increase in anthropogenic induced warming over the last two centuries is impacting marine environments. Marine planktic calcifying organisms interact sensitively to changes in sea surface temperatures (SST), and the food web structure. Here, we study two high resolution multicore records from two western Mediterranean Sea regions (Alboran and Balearic basins), areas highly affected by both natural climate change and anthropogenic warming. Cores cover the time interval from the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) to present. Reconstructed SSTs are in good agreement with other results, tracing temperature changes through the Common Era, and show a clear 20th century warming signal. Both cores show opposite abundance fluctuations of planktic foraminiferal species (Globigerina bulloides, Globorotalia inflata and Globorotalia truncatulinoides) a common group of marine calcifying zooplankton. The abundance ratios between these species show the switch between winter / spring surface productivity and deep winter mixing in the Balearic basin. In the Alboran Sea, Globigerina bulloides and Globorotalia inflata instead respond to local upwelling dynamics. In the pre-industrial era, changes in planktic foraminiferal productivity and species composition can be explained mainly by the natural variability of North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), and, to lesser extent, by the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO). In the industrial era, starting from about 1800 Common Era (CE), this variability is affected by anthropogenic surface warming, leading to enhanced vertical stratification of the upper water column, and resulting in a decrease of surface productivity at both sites. We found that natural planktic foraminiferal population dynamics in the western Mediterranean is already altered by enhanced anthropogenic impact in the industrial era, suggesting that in this region natural cycles and influences are being overprinted by human influences.

How to cite: Pallacks, S., Ziveri, P., Martrat, B., Mortyn, G. P., Grelaud, M., Schiebel, R., Incarbona, A., Garcia-Orellana, J., and Anglada-Ortiz, G.: Planktic Foraminifera changes in the western Mediterranean Anthropocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13653, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13653, 2021.

There is a major knowledge gap in the past climate oscillation of the Arabian desert, especially during the past two millennium. Reliable continuous continental records that archives at high resolution past environmental variability are useful sentinels of paleoclimate changes. Reliable interpretation from climatic proxies retrieved from lake records are crucial for identifying periodicities and the onset of climatic events and evaluating inter-annual and decadal trends driven by shifting of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). A multiproxy approach is presented for a ~3.3 m composite core from a karst lake located in Gayal el Bazal, southern Yemen. Sedimentary proxies, including grain size distribution and magnetic susceptibility (MS) coupled with geochemistry (XRF), provide an initial picture of centennial-scale environmental changes over the southern Arabian desert. The chronology of the core was anchored by five radiocarbon (14C) dates of terrestrial plants (wood) extracted from sediment samples and indicates the core extends to ~800 AD. Our data provides a snapshot for better understanding the impact of Indian Ocean monsoon variability at an exceptional resolution for a region that lacks sufficient information. Our data indicates that during the ‘Little Ice Age’ (~1500-1800 AD) was arid relative to the warm conditions that prevailed during the Medieval Warming Period (~800 to 1200 AD). The arid phase was marked by high Ca/(Al, Fe, Ti) values, increased inorganic carbon content, decreased MS values, and gypsum precipitation. Furthermore, end-member mixing analyses (EMMA) derived from the grain-size distribution corroborates the production of carbonate sand probably due to an increase in flash floods occurring concurrently with low lake levels under generally dry conditions. Aridity during the Little Ice Age is consistent with evidence and theory for weakened boreal summer monsoons during intervals of northern hemisphere cooling. Overall, this study will provide insight into the monsoon variability and a record for understanding the interactions between northward migrations of the ITCZ and tropical monsoonal dynamics during the late Holocene. In the context of current climate change and increasing population pressure, a deeper understanding of their long-term hydrological variability, this study is highly essential to satisfactorily forecast the sustainability of lakes as a resource in a warming world.

How to cite: Parth, S., Russell, J. M., and Waldmann, N.: Reconstructing 1200 years of hydroclimate variability in the southern margins of the Arabian Desert, inferred from an ancient lake in southern Yemen, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14756, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14756, 2021.

Corals are distributed throughout the tropical oceans, making them useful for resolving climate information covering time before the satellite era when instrumental data is often scarce. Coral δ18O has been used to reconstruct changes in both sea surface temperature (SST) and hydrology, while coral Sr/Ca is thought to mainly record SST. Coral δ18O data, when used in conjunction with Sr/Ca, can therefore be used to reconstruct seawater δ18O (δ18Osw), an indicator of the local precipitation-evaporation balance as well as other surface ocean hydrological changes. Coral Sr/Ca-SST relationships are critical for reconstructing δ18Osw from paired Sr/Ca and δ18O records, but vary across existing literature. Some of this variation is due to existing natural differences between corals, but variation also stems from differences in calibration methods or SST products used to determine the Sr/Ca-SST relationship. Such methodological differences complicate the comparison of results across studies and slow efforts to create a global picture of reconstructed tropical ocean hydroclimate.

Here, we use the PAGES CoralHydro2k database - a collection of 45 paired coral Sr/Ca-δ18O records and 70 coral δ18O records - to assess different methodological choices such as SST product and regression method and develop a calibration framework to use as a set of “best practices” moving forward. We also examine the sensitivity of δ18Osw to our calibration framework and to existing δ18Osw calculation methods. The PAGES CoralHydro2k project aims to leverage its coral database and apply these best practices and insights to a global reconstruction of tropical marine hydrology over the past 200 years.

How to cite: Walter, R. and the PAGES CoralHydro2k: Assessing the impact of Sr/Ca-SST calibrations on coral-based seawater δ18O reconstructions - First results from PAGES CoralHydro2k, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13949, 2021.

Recent Antarctic surface climate change has been characterized by greater warming trends in West Antarctica than in East Antarctica. Although the changes over recent decades are well studied, the short instrumental record limits our ability to determine if such asymmetric patterns are common for Antarctica and the processes at their origin. Here, we will focus on the years 0-1000 CE as some ice core records display very contrasted trends during this period. Furthermore, the climate models are unable to reproduce the warming displayed in some reconstructions from 1 to 500 CE over East Antarctica. In order to understand the origin of these apparent incompatibilities and investigate the effect of proxy selection on regional reconstructions over 0-1000 CE, we performed several offline data assimilation experiments based on different groups of d18O records and the isotope-enabled general circulation models (iCESM). When assimilating different d18O data sets, large differences appear in the pattern of temperature trend over 0-500 CE, but the patterns over 500-1000 CE are more consistent among the various experiments. This implies that the spatial pattern of temperature trend over 0-500 CE is still uncertain because of this high sensitivity on the choice of the proxies to constrain the model results, while the pattern over 500-1000 is more robust, with the greater cooling over West Antarctica than East Antarctica. This pattern over 500-1000 CE relates to the intensifying of the low pressure centered in the Amundsen Sea, which induces enhanced southerly flow through most of WAIS.

How to cite: Lyu, Z., Goosse, H., and Dalaiden, Q.: Spatial patterns of multi-centennial temperature trend in Antarctica over 0-1000 CE: insights from ice core records and modeling, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-571, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-571, 2021.

EGU21-3756 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Synoptic climatology of southern Indian Ocean and paleoclimate proxy interpretation

Danielle Udy, Tessa Vance, Anthony Kiem, Neil Holbrook, and Mark Curran

Weather systems in the southern Indian Ocean drive synoptic-scale precipitation, temperature and wind variability in East Antarctica, sub-Antarctic islands and southern Australia.  Over seasonal to decadal timescales, the mean condition associated with combinations of these synoptic weather patterns (e.g., extratropical cyclones, fronts and regions of high pressure) is often referred to as variability in the westerly wind belt or the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). The westerly wind belt is generally considered to be zonally symmetric around Antarctica however, on a daily timescale this is not the case. To capture the daily variability of regional weather systems, we used synoptic typing (Self-Organising Maps) to group weather patterns based on similar features, which are often lost when using monthly or seasonal mean fields. We identified nine key regional weather types based on anomaly pattern and strength. These include four meridional nodes, three mixed nodes, one zonal node and one transitional node. The meridional nodes are favourable for transporting warm, moist air masses to the subantarctic and Antarctic region, and are associated with increased precipitation and temperature where the systems interact with the Antarctic coastline.  These nodes have limited association with the SAM, especially during austral spring.  In contrast, the zonal and mixed nodes were strongly correlated with the SAM however, the regional synoptic representation of SAM positive conditions is not zonally symmetric and is represented by three separate nodes.  These different types of SAM positive conditions mean that the commonly used hemispheric Marshall index often fails to capture the regional variability in surface weather conditions in the southern Indian Ocean. Our results show the importance of considering different synoptic set ups of SAM conditions, particularly SAM positive, and identify conditions that are potentially missed by SAM variability (e.g., extreme precipitation events). Our results are particularly important to consider when interpreting SAM or westerly wind belt reconstructions in the study region (from ice cores, tree rings, or lake sediments).  Here we present a case study using the synoptic typing results to enhance our understanding of the Law Dome (East Antarctica) ice core record, focussing on links to large scale modes of climate variability and Australian hydroclimate.  These results enhance the usefulness of ice core proxies in coastal East Antarctica and assist with determining where and how it is appropriate to use coastal East Antarctic ice core records for reconstructions of large scale modes of climate variability (e.g. SAM and ENSO) and remote hydroclimate conditions.

How to cite: Udy, D., Vance, T., Kiem, A., Holbrook, N., and Curran, M.: Synoptic climatology of southern Indian Ocean and paleoclimate proxy interpretation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3756, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3756, 2021.

EGU21-8661 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Comparison of isotopic signatures in ice core and speleothem records to an isotope enabled climate model simulation for the last millennium

Yannick Heiser, Janica Bühler, Mathieu Casado, and Kira Rehfeld

Stable water isotope ratios (δ18O) measured in e.g. ice-cores or speleothems have long been established as temperature proxies and are used to reconstruct past climate variability but still require more quantification on spatial and temporal scales. The high resolution ice-core archives are mainly found in polar and alpine regions, whereas the speleothem records mostly grow in caves in low to mid-latitudes. To bridge between the archives, models are needed to compare the climate variability stored in both ice-cores and speleothems, which will help to evaluate future projections of climate variability.

Here, we compare a transient isotope enabled simulation from the Hadley Center Climate Model version 3 (iHadCM3) [1, 2] to polar ice-core records from the iso2k database [3] for the last millennium (LM, 850-1850 CE). We analyze time-averaged isotope ratios and their variability on decadal to centennial timescales to systematically evaluate the offsets and correlation patterns between simulated and recorded isotopes to specific climatic drivers. For better comparability between speleothem and ice core-archives, we also include non-polar ice core records, as well as monitored precipitation δ18O from a global database.

We find the time-averaged δ18O offsets between the simulation and ice-core records to be fairly small for most of the polar ice-core sites, indicating a low simulation climate offset.
As expected, we find the simulated δ18O variability to be higher in the polar regions of ice-core locations, compared to the simulated variability at speleothem cave locations. Recorded δ18O variability is also generally higher as stored in ice-cores, compared to that stored in speleothems. Both speleothems and ice-core records show damping effects on decadal time scales, which can in part be attributed to the temporal resolution of the individual records. This comparison of different proxy archives to isotope-enabled GCM output shows a promising way to evaluate the model’s capability to resolve δ18O variability.

[1]  Bühler, J. C. et al. Comparison of the oxygen isotope signatures in speleothem records and iHadCM3 model simulations for the last millennium. Climate of the Past: Discussions 1–30 (2020).

[2]  Tindall, J. C., Valdes, P. J. & Sime, L. C. Stable water isotopes in HadCM3: Isotopic signature of El Niño-Southern Oscillation and the tropical amount effect. Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres 114, 1–12 (2009).

[3] Konecky, B. L. et al. The Iso2k database: A global compilation of paleo-δ18O and δ2H records to aid understanding of Common Era climate. Earth System Science Data 12, 2261–2288 (2020).

How to cite: Heiser, Y., Bühler, J., Casado, M., and Rehfeld, K.: Comparison of isotopic signatures in ice core and speleothem records to an isotope enabled climate model simulation for the last millennium, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8661, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8661, 2021.

EGU21-12729 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

The contribution of different climate forcings on the global glacier climatic mass balance over the last millennium

Anouk Vlug, Fabien Maussion, Ben Marzeion, Matthias Prange, and Kristin Richter

The mass loss of glaciers and ice caps is one of the major contributors to sea-level rise over the past 120 years. Different climate forcings, both natural and anthropogenic, have an influence on the climate and therefore on glacier mass balance. Glaciers have a slow and delayed response to climate change, and at any point in time, their properties are therefore also a result of past climate changes. In this context, we present global glacier simulations over the last millennium. For these simulations, the Open Global Glacier Model was forced with the fully forced, single forced and control simulations of the Community Earth System Model Last Millennium Ensemble. These simulations show how different climate forcings, i.e., volcanic, greenhouse gasses, solar, orbital, land use & land cover and ozone-aerosol, impact the climatic mass balance, both individually and combined. These influences are then analyzed over time and regionally. In addition to addressing the role of the different forcings, we present the contribution of natural vs anthropogenic forcings on glacier mass balance over the last millennium.

How to cite: Vlug, A., Maussion, F., Marzeion, B., Prange, M., and Richter, K.: The contribution of different climate forcings on the global glacier climatic mass balance over the last millennium, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12729, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12729, 2021.

EGU21-15684 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Sea ice changes in the Chukchi Sea over the Industrial Era based on biomarkers

Youcheng Bai, Marie-Alexandrine Sicre, Jian Ren, Bassem Jalali, Hongliang Li, Long Lin, Zhongqiang Ji, Liang Su, Qingmei Zhu, Haiyan Jin, and Jianfang Chen

EGU21-15966 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Compiling a chemistry database from Antarctic ice cores records spanning the past 2000 years

Diana Vladimirova, Elizabeth Thomas, and on behalf of CLIVASH2k

Trends in sea ice extent and atmospheric circulation around Antarctica have exhibited large variability over recent decades. Direct observations such as satellite data cover the past four decades only. Thus, a comparison with paleoclimate archives is essential to understand the natural and anthropogenic components of these recent changes. We have initiated a data call within CLIVASH2k community (http://pastglobalchanges.org/science/wg/2k-network/projects/clivash) to collect all available sodium (Na+) and sulfate (SO42-) concentration and fluxes from Antarctic ice cores. We aim to improve our understanding of large-scale sea-ice variability and atmospheric circulation over the past 2000 years. In this respect, ice cores are a unique archive.

Here we present the new database, which builds on previous efforts by the PAGES community in gathering snow accumulation (Thomas et al. 2017) and stable water isotope data (Stenni et al. 2017).  To date, 88 published and 14 unpublished records have been submitted, 10 of which span the full 2000 years. The data, especially 2000 years-long records are equally distributed over the Antarctic continent and all coastal regions are well represented.  The new data will allow us to investigate interannual and decadal-to-centennial scale variability in sea ice extent and atmospheric circulation and its regional differences over the past 2000 years.

How to cite: Vladimirova, D., Thomas, E., and CLIVASH2k, O. B. O.: Compiling a chemistry database from Antarctic ice cores records spanning the past 2000 years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15966, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15966, 2021.

EGU21-15355 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

A multi-century spring precipitation history for northern Iran derived from tree-ring δ18O 

Zeynab Foroozan, Jussi Grießinger, Kambiz Pourtahmasi, and Achim Bräuning

Knowledge about the long-term hydroclimatic variability is essential to analyze the historic course and recent impact of climate change, especially in semi-arid and arid regions of the world. In this study, we present the first tree-ring δ18O chronology for the semi-arid parts of northern Iran based on juniper trees. We were able to reconstruct past hydroclimatic variability for the past 500 years. The highly significant correlation between tree-ring δ18O and spring precipitation indicates the primary influence of spring moisture availability on δ18O variations. The thereof derived precipitation reconstruction reveals short and long-term variability of precipitation intensity, duration, and frequency of dry/wet events. During the past 500 years, the driest period occurred in the 16th century, whereas the 18th century was comparably wet. A gradual decline in the reconstructed spring precipitation is evident since the beginning of the 19th century, culminating in the continuing drought of the 20th century. An analysis of dry/wet years indicated that over the last three centuries, the occurrence of years with a relatively dry spring is increasing. In contrast, more humid spring conditions are decreasing. However, the overall frequency of the occurrence of extreme events increased over the past five centuries. In addition, past hydrological disasters recorded in Persian history were well represented in our reconstruction. Correlations between our reconstructed precipitation record and large-scale circulation systems revealed no significant influence of large-scale climatic drivers on spring precipitation variations in north Iran, which therefore seem to be mostly controlled by a regional climate forcing.

How to cite: Foroozan, Z., Grießinger, J., Pourtahmasi, K., and Bräuning, A.: A multi-century spring precipitation history for northern Iran derived from tree-ring δ18O , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15355, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15355, 2021.

EGU21-7550 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Maximum latewood density records of Great Basin Bristlecone pine (Pinus Longaeva) from the White Mountains, California

Tom De Mil, Matthew Salzer, Charlotte Pearson, Valerie Trouet, and Jan Van den Bulcke

Great Basin Bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) is known for its longevity. The longest continuous tree-ring width chronology covers more than 9000 years. Tree-ring width of upper treeline bristlecone pine trees is influenced by summer temperature variability at decadal to centennial scales, but to infer a temperature signal on interannual scales, Maximum Latewood Density (MXD) is a better proxy. Here, we present a preliminary MXD chronology to investigate the temperature signal in upper treeline and lower elevation bristlecone pines. MXD was measured with an X-ray Computed Tomography toolchain in 24 dated cores,  with the oldest sample dating back to 776 CE. Ring and fibre angles were corrected and two MXD chronologies for different elevations were developed, which will be used to study climate-growth relationships and the effect of elevation on them. Future scanning will allow constructing a 5000+ year-long MXD chronology from upper treeline sites, which will provide an annual-resolution North American temperature record covering the mid-to-late Holocene.

How to cite: De Mil, T., Salzer, M., Pearson, C., Trouet, V., and Van den Bulcke, J.: Maximum latewood density records of Great Basin Bristlecone pine (Pinus Longaeva) from the White Mountains, California, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7550, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7550, 2021.

EGU21-8995 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Response of Siberian trees to climatic changes over the past 1500 years

Olga Churakova (Sidorova), Marina Fonti, Rolf Siegwolf, Tatyana Trushkina, Eugene Vaganov, and Matthias Saurer

We use an interdisciplinary approach combining stable isotopes in tree rings, pollen data, ice cores from temperature-limited environment in the Siberian north and developed a comprehensive description of the climatic changes over the past 1500 years. We found that the Climatic Optimum Period was warmer and drier compared to the Medieval one, but rather similar to the recent period. Our results indicate that the Medieval Warm period in the Taimyr Peninsula started earlier and was wetter compared to the northeastern part of Siberia (northeastern Yakutia). Summer precipitation reconstruction obtained from carbon isotopes in tree-ring cellulose from Taimyr Peninsula significantly correlated with the pollen data of the Lama Lake (Andreev et al. 2004) and oxygen isotopes of the ice core from Severnaya Zemlya (Opel et al. 2013) recording wetter climate conditions during the Medieval Warm period compared to the northeastern part of Siberia. Common large-scale climate variability was confirmed by significant relationship between oxygen isotope data in tree-ring cellulose from the Taimyr Peninsula and northeastern Yakutia, and oxygen isotope ice core data from Severnaya Zemlja during the Medieval Warm period and the recent one. Finally, we showed that the recent warming on the Taimyr Peninsula is not unprecedented in the Siberian north. Similar climate conditions were recorded by stable isotopes in tree rings, pollen, and ice core data 6000 years ago. On the northeastern part of Siberia newly developed a 1500-year summer vapor pressure deficit (VPD) reconstruction showed, that VPD increased recently, but does not yet exceed the maximum values reconstructed during the Medieval Warm period. The most humid conditions in the northeastern part of Siberia were recorded in the Early Medieval period and during the Little Ice Age. However, the increasing VPD under elevated air temperature in the last decades affects the hydrological regime of these sensitive ecosystems by greater evapotranspiration rates. Further VPD increase will significantly affect Siberian forests most likely leading to drought even under additional access of thawed permafrost water.

This work was supported by the FP7-PEOPLE-IIF-2008 - Marie Curie Action: "International Incoming Fellowships" 235122 and "Reintegration Fellowships" 909122 “Climatic and environmental changes in the Eurasian Subarctic inferred from tree-ring and stable isotope chronologies for the past and recent periods” and the Government of Krasnoyarsk Kray and Russian Foundation for Basic Research and Krasnoyarsk Foundation 20-44-240001 “Adaptation of conifer forests on the north of the Krasnoyarsk region (Taimyr Peninsula) to climatic changes after extreme events over the past 1500 years“ awarded to Olga V. Churakova (Sidorova).

How to cite: Churakova (Sidorova), O., Fonti, M., Siegwolf, R., Trushkina, T., Vaganov, E., and Saurer, M.: Response of Siberian trees to climatic changes over the past 1500 years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8995, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8995, 2021.

EGU21-10485 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Europe-Atlantic jet caused dipole mode of European climate and increased climatic extremes

Guobao Xu, Meko Matthew, Lara Klippel, Isabel Dorado-Liñán, and Valerie Trouet

The jet stream configuration over the Atlantic Ocean and the European continent substantially affects climatic extremes in Western Eurasia by transporting heat and vorticity. However, how the Europe-Atlantic jet configuration varies and how it affects European climate on the long time-scales are still unclear. We compiled a network of tree-ring width, blue intensity, and maximum density chronologies from Europe to explore past variability in the summer Europe-Atlantic Jet stream and its influence on regional climate. By combining five regional chronologies, we were able to reconstruct July-August jet stream latitude (JSL) PC2 variability over the past millennium (978-2010 CE) for the Europe-Atlantic domain (30°W to 40°E). Our reconstruction explains 40% of summer JSL PC2 variability over the instrumental period (1948-2010 CE) with strong skill. Our millennial-long reconstruction shows that summer JSL is a relevant driver of the temperature, precipitation, and drought dipoles observed between Northwestern and Southern Europe. Positive summer JSL PC2 values (northward jet position) generally lead to a strengthening of the European summer climate dipole, while negative values (southward jet position) lead to a weak or insignificant dipole mode. Our summer JSL reconstruction shows large variability and a high occurrence rate of extremes over the 20th century, as well as 1200-1350 CE Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA). The high occurrence rate of summer JSL extremes corresponds to periods with increased number of climatic extremes. Our results suggest that the summer JSL contributes to the European climate dipole both in a long-term context and in its extremes. We also reveal that the occurrence rate of summer JSL extremes is double during the 20th century compared to other periods, especially for the negative extremes, which might be related to anthropogenic warming. Our results suggest a high occurrence rate of summer JSL extremes during the 20th century, leading to more climatic extremes in Europe, as well as a prevailing northward summer JSL position resulting in a weakening climatic dipole.

How to cite: Xu, G., Matthew, M., Klippel, L., Dorado-Liñán, I., and Trouet, V.: Europe-Atlantic jet caused dipole mode of European climate and increased climatic extremes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10485, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10485, 2021.

EGU21-5405 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Statistical Characteristics of Global Daily Extreme Precipitation during the last 3350 years (1501BC – 1849 AD) 

Woon Mi Kim, Richard Blender, Michael Sigl, Christoph Raible, and Martina Messmer

Torrential rainfall and floods have had devastating impacts on civilizations throughout history. Thus, understanding long-term characteristics of extreme precipitation is necessary to identify physical mechanisms involved in such events and to be able to assess, not only the past, but also the present and future risk of extreme precipitation for society. However, the scarce spatial and temporal distribution of existing datasets on extreme precipitation complicates a detailed study of such events in the paleo climate context.  

In this study, we employ the newly produced seamless simulations from the Community Earth System Model v1.2.2 that covers the period from 1501 BC to 1849 AD to analyze the daily extreme precipitation before the preindustrial period. We explore the statistical characteristics of extreme precipitation and their association with natural external forcing, such as changes in the orbital parameters, solar cycle, insolation, and volcanic eruptions. For this, we applied to the simulations an extreme value analysis  by adopting a peak-over-threshold method (Coles et al., 2001). The 99th percentile of daily precipitation anomalies with respect to 1501BC - 1849AD are taken as the extreme values and these extremes are fitted to the Generalized Pareto Distribution to create time-stationary and covariate models (GPD models) at each grid point.  

The stationary GPD model shows that over the mid-latitudes, high scale and negative shape parameters predominate in the Pacific while the opposite condition occurs in the Atlantic sector. Over the Southern Ocean, low scale and negative shape parameters are more common. The covariate GPD models indicate some connection between the external forcing and extreme precipitation. The changes in the orbital parameters are slightly connected to the extreme precipitation over the tropical Atlantic and southern Indian oceans. Among all the forcing, the volcanic eruptions are the most influential in the extreme precipitation during the past 3350 years. The return periods of extreme precipitation decrease over the tropical Pacific, and the mid-latitude oceans and lands after volcanic eruptions, indicating that such eruptions likely increase the occurrence of extreme precipitation in these regions. Over the regions where a decrease in extreme precipitation is followed after the eruptions, such as India, Australia, and eastern Asia, the return periods decrease after volcanic eruptions.  

Overall, our study provides a long-term continuous view on the global extreme precipitation, which elucidates some complementary information to the currently available proxy and instrumental observations on extreme precipitation events. 

 

Coles, S., Bawa, J., Trenner, L., & Dorazio, P. (2001). An introduction to statistical modeling of extreme values (Vol. 208, p. 208). London: Springer. 

How to cite: Kim, W. M., Blender, R., Sigl, M., Raible, C., and Messmer, M.: Statistical Characteristics of Global Daily Extreme Precipitation during the last 3350 years (1501BC – 1849 AD) , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5405, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5405, 2021.

EGU21-1692 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Depth and seasonal biases in organic temperature proxies: a modelling study

Devika Varma, Gert-Jan Reichart, and Stefan Schouten

For more than a decade TEX86 and UK’37, derived from ratios of biomarker lipids have widely been used as organic paleotemperature proxies. Yet, these proxies, especially TEX86, have several uncertainties associated with factors such as depth and seasonal biases which are complicating its application as an annual mean sea-surface temperature (SST) proxy. To constrain this impact, we performed a relatively simple modelling exercise where we use instrumental temperature and nutrient data from 40 locations across the globe to predict theoretical proxy values and compare them with measured core-top proxy values.

The model first uses instrumental nutrient and temperature data, and probability density functions to predict the theoretical depth occurrence of the source organisms of the two proxies. Additionally, seasonal bias was introduced by predicting seasonal occurrences using instrumental nutrient and chlorophyll data. This was used to calculate the depth- and season weighed temperature signal annually deposited in the sediment, which in turn was converted to theoretical proxy values using culture or mesocosm calibrations. This showed, as expected, that depth and seasonal biases introduced scatter in the correlation between theoretical proxy values and annual mean SST but still highly significant for both UK’37 (r2= 0.96), and TEX86 (r2= 0.77). We find that the theoretical proxy values are much lower than measured proxy value for TEX86, which tentatively suggests that TEX86 might in fact be coming from shallower depths or that the mesocosm calibration is incorrect. Our model for UK’37 results in theoretical values similar to measured values except for low temperature locations. This might suggest an influence of seasonal bias towards more warmer summer seasons which is more pronounced in high latitudes than in tropics.

How to cite: Varma, D., Reichart, G.-J., and Schouten, S.: Depth and seasonal biases in organic temperature proxies: a modelling study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1692, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1692, 2021.

EGU21-12106 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Transient simulations over the Common Era in PMIP4/CMIP6

Johann Jungclaus, Eduardo Alastrue de Asenjo, Alexandre Cauquoin, Shih-Wei Fang, Myriam Khodri, Stephan Lorenz, Rumi Ohgaito, Teffy Sam, Claudia Timmreck, Matthew Toohey, Martin Werner, Kohei Yoshida, Davide Zanchettin, and Qiong Zhang

The Common Era (CE, i.e. the two millennia before the industrialization) is among the periods selected by the Paleo Model Intercomparison Project (PMIP) for transient experiments contributing to PMIP4. For PMIP4, novel estimates and updates of external forcing have been compiled (Jungclaus et al., GMD, 2017).  In addition to the Tier-1 category simulation “past1000” for the period 850 CE to 1849 CE, the Tier-3 “past2k” experiment covers the entire CE. After serious delays, the ESGF is now being filled by modeling groups running the transient simulations.

Here we provide an overview of the simulations, discuss the range of applied models, and present first results of common analyses from past1000 and subsequent historical simulations. We discuss the long-term climate evolution, the range of internally-generated and externally-forced variability and specific aspects of the response to volcanic forcing.

Another focus is the presentation of the first MPI-ESM ‘past2k’ simulations and their extension to include water isotopes in MPI-ESM-WISO. These simulations extend the pool of current ESM simulations into the 1st millennium CE and represent an important basis to assess the models’ response to external forcing and improved model-data comparison. We analyze regional trends and variations over the last 2000 years in comparison with PAGES2k reconstructions.

 

How to cite: Jungclaus, J., Alastrue de Asenjo, E., Cauquoin, A., Fang, S.-W., Khodri, M., Lorenz, S., Ohgaito, R., Sam, T., Timmreck, C., Toohey, M., Werner, M., Yoshida, K., Zanchettin, D., and Zhang, Q.: Transient simulations over the Common Era in PMIP4/CMIP6, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12106, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12106, 2021.

EGU21-16004 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Sahel droughts induced by large volcanic eruptions over the last millennium in IPSL-CM6A-LR model

Julián Villamayor and Myriam Khodri

The Sahel region is extremely sensible to alterations in its characteristic precipitation regime, associated with the West African Monsoon (WAM). In fact, the WAM presents strong variability at several timescales which has focused the attention of many works that mainly attribute such changes to variations in the sea surface temperature, the emerging increase of greenhouse gases concentration and to alterations in land use. However, the impact of large volcanic eruptions has been just tentatively addressed. This work aims at shedding more light on the influence of large volcanic eruptions on Sahel rainfall relying on past1000 simulations, covering the last millennium, of the IPSL-CM6A-LR model. The results show the mechanisms involved and the differences between tropical and high-latitude eruptions.

How to cite: Villamayor, J. and Khodri, M.: Sahel droughts induced by large volcanic eruptions over the last millennium in IPSL-CM6A-LR model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16004, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16004, 2021.

EGU21-16519 | vPICO presentations | CL1.1

Long-term Surface Temperature (LoST) Database as a Complement for Transient and Control Preindustrial Simulations

Francisco José Cuesta-Valero, Almudena García-García, Hugo Beltrami, Eduardo Zorita, and Fernando Jaume Santero
Estimates of climate sensitivity from Atmosphere-Ocean Coupled General Circulation Model (GCM) simulations present a large spread despite the continued improvements in climate modeling since the 1970s. This variability is partially caused by the dependence of several long-term feedback mechanisms on the reference climate state. However, it is difficult to provide a reference to assess the climatology of preindustrial control simulations as there are no long-term preindustrial observations.
In the ground, recent changes in ground surface temperature are observed at shallow depths as perturbations to the quasi-steady state geothermal regime. However, if undisturbed by recent surface temperature changes, the deep ground temperatures vary linearly as a function of depth, and the extrapolation of this linear behavior to the surface can be interpreted as the past long-term surface temperature climatology.
We assemble a new gridded database of past long-term ground surface temperatures (LoST database) obtained from 514 borehole temperature profiles measured across North America, and we explore its use as a potential reference for the evaluation of GCM preindustrial control simulations and past millennium simulations. All temperature profiles are truncated at 300 m depth, allowing to estimate the ground surface climatology for the period 1300-1700 of the common era. We compare the LoST database with observations from the CRU database, as well as with five past millennium simulations and five preindustrial control simulations from the third phase of the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP3) and the fifth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) archives. Our results suggest that LoST temperatures could be employed as a reference to narrow down the spread of surface temperature climatologies on GCM preindustrial control and past millennium simulations.

How to cite: Cuesta-Valero, F. J., García-García, A., Beltrami, H., Zorita, E., and Jaume Santero, F.: Long-term Surface Temperature (LoST) Database as a Complement for Transient and Control Preindustrial Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16519, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16519, 2021.

CL1.2 – Palaeoclimate modeling: from time-slices and sensitivity experiments to transient simulations into the future

EGU21-6574 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

North American rainfall patterns during past warm states: A proxy network-model comparison for the Last Interglacial and the mid-Holocene

Cameron de Wet, Jessica Oster, Daniel Ibarra, and Bryce Belanger

The Last Interglacial (LIG) period (~129,000–116,000 years BP) and the mid-Holocene (MH) (~6,000 years BP) are the two most recent intervals with temperatures comparable to low emissions scenarios for the end of the 21st century. During the LIG and the MH differences in the seasonal and latitudinal distribution of insolation led to enhanced northern hemisphere high-latitude warmth relative to the pre-industrial, despite similar greenhouse gas concentrations, marking these intervals as potentially useful analogs for future change in regions like North America. Further, the inclusion of both LIG (127 ka) and MH (6 ka) experiments in the CMIP6-PMIP4 effort provides an opportunity to better understand the regional hydroclimate responses to radiative forcing during these two intervals. The dense coverage of paleoclimate proxy records for North America during the MH (N=260 sites) reveals a pattern of relative aridity in the Pacific Northwest and Western Canada and wetness in the southern Great Basin and Mexico. However, the seasonality and driving mechanisms of rainfall patterns across the continent remain poorly understood. Our understanding of terrestrial hydroclimate in North America during the LIG is more limited (N=39 sites), largely because the LIG is beyond the range of radiocarbon dating.

Here we present spatial comparisons between output from 14 PMIP4 global circulation models and LIG and MH networks of moisture-sensitive proxies compiled for the North American continent. We utilize two statistical measures of agreement – weighted Cohen’s Kappa and Gwet’s AC2 – to assess the degree of categorical agreement between moisture patterns produced by the models and the proxy networks for each time-slice. PMIP4 models produce variable precipitation anomalies relative to the pre-industrial for both the LIG and MH experiments, often disagreeing on both the sign and magnitude of precipitation changes across much of North America. The models showing the best agreement with the proxy network are similar but not identical for the two measures, with Gwet’s AC2 values tending to be larger than Cohen’s Kappa values for all models. This pattern is enhanced for the much larger MH proxy network and is likely related to the fact that Gwet’s AC2 is a more predictable statistic in the presence of high agreement. Overall agreement is lower for the mid-Holocene than for the LIG, reflecting smaller MH rainfall anomalies in the models. The models with the highest agreement scores during the LIG produce aridity in the Rocky Mountains and Pacific Northwest and wetness in Alaska, the Yukon, the Great Basin, and parts of the Mid-West and Eastern US, although spatial coverage of the proxies in these latter two regions is poor. The models with the highest agreement score for the mid-Holocene tend to produce aridity across Canada and the northern US with dry conditions extending down the US Pacific coast and increased wetness in the American Southeast and across the North American Monsoon region. Our analyses help elucidate the driving mechanisms of rainfall patterns during past warm states and can inform which models may be the most useful for predictions of near-future hydroclimate change across North America.

How to cite: de Wet, C., Oster, J., Ibarra, D., and Belanger, B.: North American rainfall patterns during past warm states: A proxy network-model comparison for the Last Interglacial and the mid-Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6574, 2021.

EGU21-3185 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Paleo-climate shifts in the Atacama Desert from PMIP4 simulations

Mark Reyers, Stephanie Fiedler, and Yaping Shao

The Atacama Desert in Northern Chile is considered to be the driest desert on Earth. At present, the annual rainfall amount is less than 1mm for parts of the hyper-arid core of the desert. The processes controlling this hyper-aridity are known, but the mean state and variability of the regional climate on geological time scales is not well understood. In this study, we aim to analyse climate conditions in the Atacama Desert from PMIP4 simulations. Our focus is on the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), when climate records from the Central Atacama point to a substantially different climate with wetter conditions than at present (Diederich et al., 2020). We statistically analyse and evaluate PMIP4 historical simulations with respect to circulation patterns over the Southeast Pacific and Western South America which are associated with rare rainfall events in the Atacama Desert. For the evaluation, PMIP4 simulations for the historical period are compared to Reanalysis data, and we will focus on troughs and cutoff lows over the subtropical Southeast Pacific, and on the Bolivian High (Reyers et al., 2020). We then assess changes of the characteristics, e.g., the frequency of occurrence, of such circulation patterns for Paleo-climate conditions compared to the present. In the framework of our study, we perform km-scale simulations with the regional climate model WRF, using results from PMIP4 experiments for the historical period and for the LGM as boundary conditions. In the future, these simulations will be used to better understand the meso-scale processes, e.g., involved in local wind systems, that contribute to changes in the hydrological cycle and potentially impact the dust-emission activity of the desert. This study is part of the Collaborative Research Centre 1211 “Earth- Evolution at the dry Limit” (https://sfb1211.uni-koeln.de/).

Diederich, J,  Wennrich, V, Bao, R, and co-authors (2020). A 68 ka precipitation record from the hyperarid core of the Atacama Desert in northern Chile. Global and Planetary Change, 184, 103054. DOI:10.1016/j.gloplacha.2019.103054.

Reyers, M, Boehm, C, Knarr, L, Shao, Y, and Crewell, S (2020). Synoptic-to-Regional-Scale Analysis of Rainfall in the Atacama Desert (18°–26°S) Using a Long-Term Simulation with WRF. Monthly Weather Review, 149, 91-112. DOI:10.1175/MWR-D-20-0038.1.

How to cite: Reyers, M., Fiedler, S., and Shao, Y.: Paleo-climate shifts in the Atacama Desert from PMIP4 simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3185, 2021.

EGU21-12167 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

External and internal forcing of African Humid Periods from MIS 6 to MIS 1

Mateo Duque-Villegas, Martin Claussen, Victor Brovkin, and Thomas Kleinen

During the last million years, northern Africa has alternated between arid and humid conditions, as recorded by different kinds of climate archives, including fossil pollen, lake sediments, marine sediments and archaeological remains. Variations occur at millennial scale, with dry phases being similar to the current desert state in the region, and with wet phases, known as African Humid Periods (AHPs), characterised by a strong summer monsoon which can carry enough moisture inland to support rivers, lakes and lush vegetation further north than seen today. Recent sediment records from the Mediterranean Sea revealed that the previous five AHPs had different intensities, in relation to rainfall and vegetation extent. Motivated by these findings, our work focuses on explaining what caused such differences in intensity. To this end, we use the CLIMBER-2 climate model to study the AHP response to changes in three drivers of atmospheric dynamics: Earth's orbit variations, atmospheric concentration of CO2 and inland ice extent. Global transient simulations of the last 190,000 years are used in new factorisation analyses, which allow us to separate the individual contributions of the forcings to the AHP intensity, as well as those of their synergies. We confirm the predominant role of the orbital forcing in the strength of the last five AHPs, and our simulations agree with previous estimates of a threshold in orbital forcing above which an AHP develops. Moreover, we show that atmospheric CO2 and the extent of ice sheets can also add up to be as important as the orbital parameters. High values of CO2, past a 205 ppm threshold, and low values of ice sheets extent, below an 8 % of global land surface threshold, yield the AHPs with the most precipitation and vegetation. Additionally, our results show that AHPs differ not only in amplitude, but also in their speed of change, and we find that the non-linear vegetation response of AHPs does not correlate with a single forcing and that the vegetation growth response is faster than its subsequent decline. In regards to future change, an extension of the simulations until the next 50,000 years, shows CO2 to be the main driver of AHPs, with orbital forcing only setting the pace and their intensities being scenario-dependent.

How to cite: Duque-Villegas, M., Claussen, M., Brovkin, V., and Kleinen, T.: External and internal forcing of African Humid Periods from MIS 6 to MIS 1, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12167, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12167, 2021.

During the mid-Holocene, an expansion of vegetation, lakes and wetlands over North Africa reinforced the West African monsoon precipitation increase that was initiated by changes in the orbital forcing. Sedimentary records reflect these surface changes, however, they provide only limited spatial and temporal information about the size and distribution of mid-Holocene lakes and wetlands. Previous simulation studies that investigated the influence of mid-Holocene lakes and wetlands on the West African monsoon precipitation, prescribed either a small lake and wetland extent or focusing on mega-lakes only. In contrast to these simulation studies, we investigate the range of simulated West African monsoon precipitation changes caused by a small and a potential maximum lake and wetland extent during the mid-Holocene.

Therefore, four mid-Holocene sensitivity experiments are conducted using the atmosphere model ICON-A and the land model JSBACH4 at 160 km resolution. The simulations have a 30-year evaluation period and only differ in their lake and wetland extent over North Africa: (1) pre-industrial lakes, (2) small lake extent, (3) maximum lake extent and (4) maximum wetland extent. The small lake extent is given by the reconstruction map of Hoelzmann et al. (1998) and the potential maximum lake and wetland extent is given by a model derived map of Tegen et al. (2002).

The simulation results reveal that the maximum lake extent shifts the Sahel precipitation threshold (> 200 mm/year) about 3 ° further northward than the small lake extent. The major precipitation differences between the small and maximum lake extent results from the lakes over the West Sahara. Additionally, the maximum wetland extent causes a stronger West African monsoon precipitation increase than the equally large maximum lake extent, particularly at higher latitudes.

How to cite: Specht, N., Claußen, M., and Kleinen, T.: Influence of a small and maximum lake and wetland extent on the simulated West African monsoon precipitation during the mid-Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15050, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15050, 2021.

EGU21-10640 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Dominant role of the global monsoon intensity on large-scale Holocene vegetation transitions

Anne Dallmeyer, Martin Claussen, and Ulrike Herzschuh

We give an overview on the global change in mid-to late Holocene vegetation pattern derived from a transient MPI-ESM1.2 simulation and discuss the vegetation trend in the context of the simulated Holocene climate change. The model captures the main trends found in reconstructions. Most prominent are the southward retreat of the northern treeline, coinciding the strong reduction of forest cover in the high northern latitudes during the Holocene, and the vast increase of the Sahara desert that is embedded in a general decrease and equator-ward retreat of the vegetation in the northern hemispheric monsoon margin regions. In contrast, large parts of the extratropical North American continent experience a greening during the Holocene, caused by an increase in forest and grass cover.

While the broad forest decline in the high northern latitudes can mainly be explained by the cooling of the warm season climate, precipitation is the driving factor for the tropical and extratropical vegetation trends on the northern hemisphere south of 60°N. The model indicates that most of the changes in rainfall can be related to the weakening of the northern hemispheric monsoon systems and the response of the global atmospheric circulation to this weakening.

The southern hemisphere is less affected by changes in total vegetation cover during the last 8000 years, but the monsoon related increase in precipitation and the insolation-induced cooling of the winter climate lead to shifts in the vegetation composition, mainly in between the woody plant functional types (PFTs).

The simulated large-scale global vegetation pattern almost linearly follow the subtle, approximately linear orbital forcing. Non-linear and more rapid changes in vegetation cover occur only on a regional level. The most striking area is the western Sahel-Sahara domain that experiences a rapid vegetation decline to a rather desertic state, in line with a strong decrease in moisture availability. The model also indicates rapid shifts in the vegetation composition in some regions in the high northern latitudes, in South Asia and in the monsoon margins of the southern hemisphere. These rapid transitions are mainly triggered by changes in the winter temperatures, which go into, or move out of, the bioclimatic tolerance range of the individual PFTs defined in the model and therefore have to be interpreted differently.

In summary, our model results identify the global monsoon system as the key player in Holocene climate and vegetation history and point to a far greater importance of the monsoon systems on the extra-monsoonal regions than previously assumed.

How to cite: Dallmeyer, A., Claussen, M., and Herzschuh, U.: Dominant role of the global monsoon intensity on large-scale Holocene vegetation transitions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10640, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10640, 2021.

EGU21-3792 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

PMIP4/CMIP6 last interglacial simulations using three different versions of MIROC: importance of vegetation

Ryouta O'ishi, Wing-Le Chan, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, Sam Sherriff-Tadano, Rumi Ohgaito, and Masakazu Yoshimori

We carry out three sets of last interglacial (LIG) experiments, named lig127k, and of pre-industrial experiments, named piControl, both as part of PMIP4/CMIP6 using three versions of the MIROC model: MIROC4m, MIROC4m-LPJ, and MIROC-ES2L. The results are compared with reconstructions from climate proxy data. All models show summer warming over northern high-latitude land, reflecting the differences between the distributions of the LIG and present-day solar irradiance. Globally averaged temperature changes are −0.94 K (MIROC4m), −0.39 K (MIROC4m-LPJ), and −0.43 K (MIROC-ES2L).
Only MIROC4m-LPJ, which includes dynamical vegetation feedback from the change in vegetation distribution, shows annual mean warming signals at northern high latitudes, as indicated by proxy data. In contrast, the latest Earth system model (ESM) of MIROC, MIROC-ES2L, which considers only a partial vegetation effect through the leaf area index, shows no change or even annual cooling over large parts of the Northern Hemisphere. Results from the series of experiments show that the inclusion of full vegetation feedback is necessary for the reproduction of the strong annual warming over land at northern high latitudes. The LIG experimental results show that the warming predicted by models is still underestimated, even with dynamical vegetation, compared to reconstructions from proxy data, suggesting that further investigation and improvement to the climate feedback mechanism are needed.

How to cite: O'ishi, R., Chan, W.-L., Abe-Ouchi, A., Sherriff-Tadano, S., Ohgaito, R., and Yoshimori, M.: PMIP4/CMIP6 last interglacial simulations using three different versions of MIROC: importance of vegetation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3792, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3792, 2021.

EGU21-4304 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Contribution of forcings to Holocene climate evolution

Peter Hopcroft and Paul Valdes

The climate evolution of the past few thousand years is essential for understanding the context in which civilisation arose and for understanding the natural background of anthropogenic influence. Proxy-inferred records show a complex picture of earlier warming and later cooling during the Holocene depending on region and reconstruction method. In contrast climate model simulations almost uniformly show warming throughout the past 10,000 years and for example also fail to reproduce a major advance of rainbelt over the Sahara.  These discrepancies raise questions about the reliability of climate models on longer-time scales.

We present a suite of four new transient Holocene simulations covering the last 8500 years using the HadCM3B-M21aD coupled general circulation. We use an optimised version of this model which is able to replicate the greening of the Sahara through changes to the atmospheric convection and vegetation schemes. We apply transient changes in Earth’s orbit, ice-sheets and sea-level and greenhouse gases, and optionally solar output, volcanic eruptions and anthropogenic land-use change.  The simulations without land-use show a warming throughout the Holocene, albeit with significantly higher variability once volcanic eruptions are included. With the inclusion of land-use change temperature trends in Northern Hemisphere are reversed from around 4000 years before present.

We explore the contribution of different forcings to the regional trends in the model ensemble and we compare the simulations against the Holocene reconstructions to evaluate the relative importance of each forcing. We also use the model ensemble to quantify the terrestrial coverage of proxy locations that is required to reliably infer global mean temperature variations.

How to cite: Hopcroft, P. and Valdes, P.: Contribution of forcings to Holocene climate evolution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4304, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4304, 2021.

EGU21-13896 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Speleothems of South American and Asian Monsoons Influenced by a Green Sahara

Clay Tabor, Bette Otto-Bliesner, and Zhengyu Liu

Compared to preindustrial, the mid-Holocene (6 ka) had significantly greater Northern Hemisphere summer insolation, slightly warmer global surface temperature, and slightly lower CO2 concentration. Vegetation was also different during the mid-Holocene. Possibly most prominent was the growth of temperate vegetation in the now barren Sahara. This Saharan vegetation response was related to intensification of the African Monsoon associated with the mid-Holocene orbital configuration. Hydroclimate of the Asian Monsoon and South American Monsoon also responded to mid-Holocene forcings, with general wetting and drying, respectively.

The mid-Holocene is frequently used for model-proxy comparison studies. However, climate models often struggle to replicate the proxy signals of this period. Here, we attempt to reduce these model-proxy discrepancies by exploring the significance of a vegetated Sahara during the mid-Holocene. Using the water isotopologue tracer enabled version of the Community Earth System Model (iCESM1), we perform mid-Holocene simulations that include and exclude temperate vegetation in the Sahara. We compare our model results with δ18O values from mid-Holocene speleothem records in the Asian and South American Monsoon regions.

We find that inclusion of vegetated Sahara during the mid-Holocene leads to global warming, alters the hemispheric distribution of energy, and generally amplifies the δ18O of precipitation responses in the South American and Asian Monsoon regions; these feedbacks improve the δ18O agreement between model outputs and speleothem records of the mid-Holocene. Our results highlight the importance of regional vegetation alteration for accurate simulation of past climate, even when the region of study is far from the source of vegetation change.

How to cite: Tabor, C., Otto-Bliesner, B., and Liu, Z.: Speleothems of South American and Asian Monsoons Influenced by a Green Sahara, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13896, 2021.

EGU21-1842 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Comparing temperature trends and variability over the Holocene in climate models of low and high complexity

Christian Wirths, Elisa Ziegler, Matthew Toohey, Julie Christin Schindlbeck-Belo, Steffen Kutterolf, Heather Anders, and Kira Rehfeld

Modeled and observed temperature trends over the Holocene disagree. Proxy reconstructions suggest global cooling during the late Holocene. Model simulations, on the other hand, show a warming trend for the entire Holocene, a contradiction known as the Holocene temperature conundrum.  

A recent study by Bader et. al. (2020) introduced a new approach to the question by proposing the coexistence of a cooling and warming climate mode. While the warming mode is proposed to be related to changes in greenhouse gas concentrations, the physical process behind the cooling mode might be a change in the seasonal cycle of Arctic sea-ice. It’s unclear to what extent this process is responsible for the observed climate response. Depending on their strength and location these modes have strong implications for proxy data interpretation and location selection when calculating global mean temperatures.   

Here, we investigate if similar modes and temperature trends can be found in models of different complexity. Therefore, we use a 2D Energy Balance Model (EBM), with solar, volcanic, ice-sheet and greenhouse gas forcing, for transient simulations of the Holocene climate. We analyze these Holocene climate simulations in terms of global and regional temperature trends, modes and variability patterns. We conduct sensitivity tests to examine the influence of the forcings on those trends and modes. In particular, we are interested in the influence of volcanic eruptions on the Holocene climate. Furthermore, we compare our model results with temperature reconstructions and simulations from Earth System Models.    

Altogether, we comprehensively analyze Holocene climate as simulated by a conceptual EBM, a state-of-the-art Earth System Model and proxy reconstructions. The results provide insight into whether models of different complexity produce similar modes and trends and whether these occur due to climate forcing rather than internal processes of the earth system. Finally, we will provide a better understanding of Holocene cooling and warming and the interpretation of differences between Holocene temperature proxy reconstructions and climate model simulations.    

 

References:  
Bader, J., Jungclaus, J., Krivova, N. et al. Global temperature modes shed light on the Holocene temperature conundrum. Nat Commun 11, 4726 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18478-6 

How to cite: Wirths, C., Ziegler, E., Toohey, M., Schindlbeck-Belo, J. C., Kutterolf, S., Anders, H., and Rehfeld, K.: Comparing temperature trends and variability over the Holocene in climate models of low and high complexity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1842, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1842, 2021.

EGU21-15712 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Temporal evolution of sea surface temperatures in the coastal upwelling off North Africa

Marie-Alexandrine Sicre, Eva Moreno, Vincent Klein, Anna Alves, and Simon Puaud

This study presents new high-resolution reconstructions of sea surface temperatures (SSTs) obtained from alkenones off the coast of North West Africa between 19 °N and xx 27°N latitude. Sediment grain-size distributions were also generated to provide new information on the Moroccan and Mauritanian upwelling zone over the Industrial Era. Our data shows that over the past two centuries, SSTs gradually increased in the southernmost cores, while in the northernmost sites they show cooling. Changes in sea level pressure and temperature gradients between land and sea would have caused major changes in atmospheric circulation by disrupting and intensifying the system of North-East winds (Trade winds) and southwest Monsoon winds. With global warming, increase in the monsoon might be expected, causing the weakening easterly winds favorable to the formation of upwellings. Enhanced stratification of the water column would prevent upwelling to develop accounting for surface water warming with consequences on the ecosystems and fisheries.

How to cite: Sicre, M.-A., Moreno, E., Klein, V., Alves, A., and Puaud, S.: Temporal evolution of sea surface temperatures in the coastal upwelling off North Africa, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15712, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15712, 2021.

EGU21-12364 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

AMOC instability during the Last Inerglacial

Augustin Kessler, Didier Roche, Eirik Galaasen, Jerry Tjiputra, Nathaelle Bouttes, and Ulysses Ninnemann

Multiple evidences from the analysis of satellite, in-situ and proxy data show that the climate is already changing toward a warmer Earth System due to our emissions of CO2 into the atmosphere. However, the magnitude and the extent of changes remain difficult to predict. A change in the ocean thermohaline circulation and its consequences for climate, such as drought, regional sea-level and ocean carbon uptake remain under debate as this circulation has been long thought to be stable during warm Earth periods – Interglacials. However, recent high-resolution reconstructions of carbon isotopes (δ13C) from the deep North Atlantic challenge this idea of stability and point toward abrupt modifications in the ocean interior biogeochemistry and/or ocean thermohaline circulation during the Last Interglacial (LIG, 125ka – 115ka).

 

Our model simulation of the LIG reproduces the observed magnitude and timescale of the reconstructed variations of δ13C, highlighting crucial dynamical changes in two regions of the North Atlantic deep-water formation (south of Greenland and south of Svalbard). These regions are found to drive the variations in the strength of the Atlantic Overturning Circulation (AMOC) when the Arctic sea-ice extent is perturbed.

 

Our study suggests that the AMOC may have experienced great instability phase during some parts of the LIG. The water mass geometry reorganization from the warm onset at 125ka to the glacial inception at 115ka could also have greatly impacted the distribution of carbon in the interior Ocean. Changes in sea-ice cover either south of Svalbard or in the Southern Ocean seem to play a determining role. However, in our global warming context, our study suggests that the mechanisms responsible for the LIG AMOC instability of the LIG may not occur by the end of the century if the Arctic sea-ice retreats from the high latitudes of the North Atlantic as projected by climate models.

 

How to cite: Kessler, A., Roche, D., Galaasen, E., Tjiputra, J., Bouttes, N., and Ninnemann, U.: AMOC instability during the Last Inerglacial, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12364, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12364, 2021.

EGU21-7707 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Simulation of the mid-Pliocene Warm Period using HadGEM3-GC31-LL: Pliocene climate relative to the pre-industrial era, previous model versions, other climate models and proxy data

Charles Williams, Daniel Lunt, Alistair Sellar, William Roberts, Robin Smith, Peter Hopcroft, and Emma Stone

To better understand the processes contributing to future climate change, palaeoclimate model simulations are an important tool because they allow testing of the models’ ability to simulate very different climates than that of today.  As part of CMIP6/PMIP4, the latest version of the UK’s physical climate model, HadGEM3-GC31-LL (hereafter, for brevity, HadGEM3), was recently used to simulate the mid-Holocene (~6 ka) and Last Interglacial (~127 ka) simulations and the results were compared to the preindustrial era, previous versions of the same model and proxy data (see Williams et al. 2020, Climate of the Past).  Here, we use the same model to go further back in time, presenting the results from the mid-Pliocene Warm Period (~3.3 to 3 ma, hereafter the “Pliocene” for brevity).  This period is of particular interest when it comes to projections of future climate change under various scenarios of CO2 emissions, because it is the most recent time in Earth’s history when CO2 levels were roughly equivalent to today.  In response, albeit due to slower mechanisms than today’s anthropogenic fossil fuel driven-change, during the Pliocene global mean temperatures were 2-3°C higher than today, more so at the poles.

 

Here, we present results from the HadGEM3 Pliocene simulation.  The model is responding to the Pliocene boundary conditions in a manner consistent with current understanding and existing literature.  When compared to the preindustrial era, global mean temperatures are currently ~5°C higher, with the majority of warming coming from high latitudes due to polar amplification from a lack of sea ice.  Relative to other models within the Pliocene Modelling Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP), this is the 2nd warmest model, with the majority of others only showing up to a 4.5°C increase and many a lot less.  This is consistent with the relatively high sensitivity of HadGEM3, relative to other CMIP6-class models.  When compared to a previous generation of the same UK model, HadCM3, similar patterns of both surface temperature and precipitation changes are shown (relative to preindustrial).  Moreover, when the simulations are compared to proxy data, the results suggest that the HadGEM3 Pliocene simulation is closer to the reconstructions than its predecessor.

How to cite: Williams, C., Lunt, D., Sellar, A., Roberts, W., Smith, R., Hopcroft, P., and Stone, E.: Simulation of the mid-Pliocene Warm Period using HadGEM3-GC31-LL: Pliocene climate relative to the pre-industrial era, previous model versions, other climate models and proxy data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7707, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7707, 2021.

EGU21-11408 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Enhanced humidity in SW Iberia driven by the combination of insolation and ice-sheet forcing during MIS 13 interglacial

Dulce Oliveira, Stéphanie Desprat, Qiuzhen Yin, Teresa Rodrigues, Filipa Naughton, Ricardo Trigo, Qianqian Su, Joan O. Grimalt, Montserrat Alonso-Garcia, Antje H.L. Voelker, Fátima Abrantes, and Maria Fernanda Sánchez Goñi

Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 13, ~500 ky ago, represents a Quaternary interglacial of primary interest due to the unexpected enhancement of monsoon systems under a cool climate characterised by low atmospheric CO2 and larger ice volume than the present interglacial. Yet, key questions remain about its regional expression (intensity, climate variability, length) and underlying forcing factors. Here we examine the SW Iberian vegetation and terrestrial climate during MIS 13 directly compared with the sea surface temperatures using sediments from IODP Site U1385, and combine those terrestrial-marine profiles with climate-model experiments. We show for the first time that MIS 13 stands out for its large forest expansions with a reduced Mediterranean character alternating with muted forest contractions, indicating that this stage is marked by a cool-temperate climate regime with high levels of humidity. Results of our data-model approach reveal that that the dominant effect of MIS 13 insolation forcing on the regional vegetation and precipitation regime in SW Iberia is amplified by the relatively large extent of the ice-sheets in high northern latitudes. In qualitative agreement with the pollen-based evidence, model results show that ice-sheet forcing triggers an increase in the SW Iberian tree fraction along with both intensified winter and summer rainfall. We propose that the interactions between ice-sheets and major atmospheric circulation systems may have resulted in the persistent influence of the mid-latitude cells over the SW Iberian region, which led to intensified moisture availability and reduced seasonality, and, in turn, to a pronounced expansion of the temperate forest.

How to cite: Oliveira, D., Desprat, S., Yin, Q., Rodrigues, T., Naughton, F., Trigo, R., Su, Q., Grimalt, J. O., Alonso-Garcia, M., Voelker, A. H. L., Abrantes, F., and Sánchez Goñi, M. F.: Enhanced humidity in SW Iberia driven by the combination of insolation and ice-sheet forcing during MIS 13 interglacial, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11408, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11408, 2021.

EGU21-13907 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Mid-Pliocene mesic subtropical hydroclimate over continents driven by land surface changes

Ran Feng, Tripti Bhattacharya, Bette Otto-bliesner, and Esther Brady and the PlioMIP2

Earth System Models (ESMs) project drying of the northern subtropics by the end of the 21st century. However, geologic evidence from intervals with elevated concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (pCO2), like the mid-Pliocene, suggest mesic subtropical conditions. Several hypotheses, including an El Niño-like SST pattern and weaker Hadley circulation, have been proposed to explain this mismatch. Here, we show that PlioMIP2 ensemble broadly capture the pattern of proxy reconstructed Pliocene hydroclimate, notably a wetter Sahel and southeast Asia. Sensitivity simulations reveal that this pattern is driven by summertime rainfall increases as a result of lowered albedo and a distinct surface warming pattern, generated by prescribed vegetation and ice sheet changes. The resultant tropospheric moistening and stationary wave pattern enhance moisture convergence into the northern subtropics. Our results suggest that mid-Pliocene hydroclimate is part of the Earth system feedback to sustained CO2 concentrations similar to today.

How to cite: Feng, R., Bhattacharya, T., Otto-bliesner, B., and Brady, E. and the PlioMIP2: Mid-Pliocene mesic subtropical hydroclimate over continents driven by land surface changes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13907, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13907, 2021.

EGU21-9760 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Impact of Arctic gateways closure on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation in the Pliocene

Julia Weiffenbach, Michiel Baatsen, and Anna von der Heydt

The mid-Pliocene climate is the most recent geological period with a greenhouse gas concentration of approximately 400 ppmv, similar to the present day. Proxy reconstructions indicate enhanced warming in the high North Atlantic in the mid-Pliocene, which has been suggested to be a response to a stronger Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). PlioMIP2 ensemble results show a stronger AMOC and simulated North Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SSTs) match reconstructions better than PlioMIP1. A major difference between PlioMIP1 and PlioMIP2 is the closure of the Bering Strait and Canadian Archipelago in the Pliocene. Previous studies have shown that closure of these Arctic gateways leads to an enhanced AMOC due to altered freshwater fluxes in the Arctic.

Analysis of our Community Earth System Model (CESM1) simulations shows that the simulated increase in North Atlantic SSTs and strengthened AMOC in the Pliocene is a result of Pliocene boundary conditions rather than CO2 concentration increase. Here we compare results from two runs with pre-industrial boundary conditions and 280 and 560 ppmv CO2 concentrations and three runs with PlioMIP2 boundary conditions and 280, 400 and 560 ppmv CO2 concentrations. Results show a 10-15% stronger AMOC in the Pliocene simulations as well as enhanced warming and saltening of the North Atlantic sea surface. While there is a stronger AMOC, the Atlantic northward ocean heat transport (OHT) in the Pliocene simulations only increases 0-3% with respect to the pre-industrial. Analysis indicates there is an altered relationship between the AMOC and OHT in the Pliocene, pointing to fundamentally different behavior of the AMOC in the Pliocene simulations. This is supported by a specific spatial pattern of deep water formation (DWF) areas in the Pliocene simulations that is significantly different from that of the pre-industrial. In the Pliocene simulations, DWF areas adjacent to south Greenland disappear and new DWF areas appear further southwards in the Labrador Sea off the coast of Newfounland. These results indicate that insight into the effect of the palaeogeographic boundary conditions is crucial to understanding the Pliocene climate and its potential as a geological equivalent to a future greenhouse climate.

How to cite: Weiffenbach, J., Baatsen, M., and von der Heydt, A.: Impact of Arctic gateways closure on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation in the Pliocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9760, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9760, 2021.

EGU21-8383 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Model-data comparison in a strongly eddying Eocene ocean

Peter Nooteboom, Michiel Baatsen, Peter Bijl, Erik van Sebille, Appy Sluijs, Henk Dijkstra, and Anna von der Heydt

Simulations of the geological past using General Circulation Models (GCMs) are computationally expensive. Mainly because of the long equilibration time scales, most of these GCMs have ocean components with a horizontal resolution of 1° or coarser. Such models are non-eddying and the effects of mesoscale ocean eddies on the transport of heat and salt are parameterized. However, from present-day ocean modeling studies, it is known that eddying ocean models better represent regional and time-mean ocean flows compared to non-eddying models. At the same time, proxy data from sediment sample sites represent climate at specific locations. Hence, the coarse ocean resolution of typical palaeo-GCMs lead to a challenge for model-data comparison in past climates.

Here we present the first simulations of a global eddying Eocene ocean with a 0.1° (horizontal) resolution model, which are initialized and forced with data from a coarser resolution (1° horizontally) equilibrated coupled ocean-atmosphere GCM. We investigate the response of the model equilibrium state to the change in ocean resolution and the consequences this has for model-data comparison in the middle-late Eocene (38Ma). We find that, compared to the non-eddying model, the eddying ocean resolution of palaeomodels reduce the biases in both sea surface temperatures and biogeographic patterns which are derived from proxy data.

How to cite: Nooteboom, P., Baatsen, M., Bijl, P., van Sebille, E., Sluijs, A., Dijkstra, H., and von der Heydt, A.: Model-data comparison in a strongly eddying Eocene ocean, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8383, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8383, 2021.

Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO, ~53-51 million years) is one of the past warm periods, associated with high CO2 concentrations (~900-2500 ppmv), which can serve as an analogue for our possible future, high C02 climate. One notable feature of this hothouse climate state is the weaker meridional temperature gradient relative to pre-industrial values. This have been confirmed by both proxies and models, but the extent of the temperature gradient still requires more research. Models are challenged to reproduce the stronger than present day polar amplification signal, and it is also shown that high latitude proxy data are often influenced by seasonal bias. Thus, there is an uncertainty regarding both the observed and modelled meridional gradient and the mentioned issues complicate also the comparison between modeled and proxy data.

In our work we aim to investigate the EECO period with a simple energy balance box model and apply the maximum entropy production principle to explore the possible scenarios of meridional temperature gradients. We find that the maximum entropy production principle could be beneficial in the paleoclimate context since it has the utility to give an accurate prediction for non-equilibrium systems with the minimal amount of information. We also assess the heat transport signaled by proxy data and by state-of-the-art model outputs in accordance to our theoretical constrains based on the idealized test case.

How to cite: Kelemen, F. D. and Ahrens, B.: Exploring the possible meridional temperature gradient of Early Eocene Climatic Optimum with an energy balance model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7365, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7365, 2021.

EGU21-15417 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Global temperature and hydroclimate in warmer climates of the past and future: the Last Interglacial versus greenhouse scenarios

Paolo Scussolini, Pepijn Bakker, Paolo De Luca, Dim Coumou, Joyce Bosmans, Gerrit Lohmann, Zoë Thomas, Chris Turney, Laurie Menviel, Takashi Obase, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, Pascale Braconnot, Bette Otto-Bliesner, Qiuzhen Yin, Matthias Prange, Chronis Tzedakis, Emilie Capron, Hans Renssen, Philip Ward, and Jeroen Aerts

Past climates contain precious information about the workings of the climate system, and about what can be expected in a changed climate. The Last Interglacial (LIG; ca. 125,000 years ago) is the most recent period of climate warmer than modern, at least in the Northern Hemisphere. Because of this, it has been often proposed that the LIG holds a partial analogy with a future warmer climate forced by enhanced greenhouse effect. Still, such analogy has never been examined in a quantitative manner. Here we address the question: for which scenario, time horizon, regions and season is the climate of the LIG a useful analogue of the future? We use the results of 13 climate models that performed the standard experiments of PMIP4 and CMIP6, and present a comparison of hemispheric temperature and precipitation between the LIG and SSP scenarios of the future. We also two independent assessments of models performance, by comparing their temperature and precipitation to climate reanalysis of the last decades and to proxies of the LIG. Insights gained from this comparison can inform studies in disciplines beyond climate studies, such as hydrology and ecology.

How to cite: Scussolini, P., Bakker, P., De Luca, P., Coumou, D., Bosmans, J., Lohmann, G., Thomas, Z., Turney, C., Menviel, L., Obase, T., Abe-Ouchi, A., Braconnot, P., Otto-Bliesner, B., Yin, Q., Prange, M., Tzedakis, C., Capron, E., Renssen, H., Ward, P., and Aerts, J.: Global temperature and hydroclimate in warmer climates of the past and future: the Last Interglacial versus greenhouse scenarios, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15417, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15417, 2021.

EGU21-11083 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

From the last interglacial to the future – new insights from modeling the last glacial-interglacial cycle in PalMod

Kerstin Fieg, Mojib Latif, Michael Schulz, and Tatjana Ilyina

We present new insights from the project PalMod, which started in 2016 and is envisioned to run for a decade. The modelling initiative PalMod aims at filling the long-standing scientific gaps in our understanding of the dynamics and variability of the climate system during the last glacial-interglacial cycle. One of the grand challenges in this context is to quantify the processes that determine the spectrum of climate variability on timescales that range from seasons to millennia. Climatic processes are intimately coupled across these timescales. Understanding variability at any one timescale requires understanding of the whole spectrum. If we could successfully simulate the spectrum of climate variability during the last glacial cycle in Earth system models, would this enable us to more reliably assess the future climate change? Such simulations are necessary to deduce, for example, if a regime shift in climate variability could occur during the next centuries and millennia in response to global warming. PalMod is specifically designed to enhance our understanding of the Earth system dynamics and its variability on timescales up to the multimillennial with complex Earth System Models.

The following major goals were achieved up to now:

  • Full coupling of atmosphere, ocean and ice-sheet models, enabling investigation of Heinrich Events and bi-stability of the AMOC, and millennial-scale transient climate-ice sheet simulations.
  • Implementation of a coupled ocean and land biogeochemistry enabling simulations with prognostic atmospheric CO2 concentrations and including improved representation of methane (CH4) in transient deglaciation runs.
  • Systematic comparison of newly compiled proxy data with model simulations.

The major goal for the next two years is to set up the fully coupled physical-biogeochemical model which will be tested for three time periods: deglaciation, glacial inception and Marine Isotope Stage 3 (MIS3). This fully coupled model will be eventually used to simulate the complete glacial cycle and project the climate over the next few millennia.

How to cite: Fieg, K., Latif, M., Schulz, M., and Ilyina, T.: From the last interglacial to the future – new insights from modeling the last glacial-interglacial cycle in PalMod, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11083, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11083, 2021.

EGU21-8512 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Evolution of the climate in the next million years: A reduced-complexity model for glacial cycles and impact of fossil fuel CO2

Stefanie Talento and Andrey Ganopolski

We propose a reduced-complexity process-based model for the long-term evolution of the global ice volume, atmospheric CO2 concentration and global mean temperature. The model only external forcings are the orbital forcing and anthropogenic CO2 cumulative emissions. The model consists of a system of three coupled non-linear differential equations, representing physical mechanisms relevant for the evolution of the climate – ice sheets – Carbon cycle system in timescales longer than thousands of years. The model is successful in reproducing the glacial-interglacial fluctuations of the last 800 kyr, in good agreement with paleorecords both in terms of timing and amplitude, with a correlation between modelled and paleo global ice volume of up to 0.86.

Using different model realisations, we generate a probabilistic forecast of the evolution of the Earth system over the next 1 million years under natural and several fossil-fuel CO2 release scenarios. In the natural scenario, the model assigns high probability of occurrence of long interglacials in the periods between present and 50 kyr after present, and between 400 kyr and 500 kyr after present. The next full glacial conditions are most likely to occur 90 kyr after present. The model shows that even already achieved cumulative CO2 anthropogenic emissions (500 PgC) are capable of affecting the climate evolution for up to half million years, indicating that the beginning of the next glaciation is highly unlikely in the next 150 kyr. If cumulative fossil-fuel CO2 emissions reach 3000 PgC, or higher, the model predicts with high probability ice-free Northern Hemisphere landmass conditions will prevail in the next half million years, postponing the natural occurrence of the next glacial inception to 600 kyr after present.

How to cite: Talento, S. and Ganopolski, A.: Evolution of the climate in the next million years: A reduced-complexity model for glacial cycles and impact of fossil fuel CO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8512, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8512, 2021.

EGU21-12440 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Methane in the climate system -- from the last glacial to the future

Thomas Kleinen, Sergey Gromov, Benedikt Steil, and Victor Brovkin

Between the last glacial maximum (LGM) and preindustrial times (PI), the atmospheric concentration of CH4, as shown by reconstructions from ice cores, roughly doubled. It then doubled again from PI to the present. Ice cores, however, cannot tell us how that development will continue in the future, and ice cores also cannot shed light on the causes of the rise in methane, as well as the rapid fluctuations during periods such as the Bolling-Allerod and Younger Dryas.

We use a methane-enabled version of MPI-ESM, the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology Earth System Model, to investigate changes in methane cycling in a transient ESM experiment from the LGM to the present, continuing onwards into the future for the next millennium. The model is driven by prescribed orbit, greenhouse gases and ice sheets, with all other changes to the climate system determined internally. Methane cycling is modelled by modules representing the atmospheric transport and sink of methane, as well as terrestrial sources and sinks from soils, termites, and fires. Thus, the full natural methane cycle – with the exception of geological and animal emissions – is represented in the model. For historical and future climate, anthropogenic emissions of methane are considered, too.

We show that the methane increase since the LGM is largely driven by source changes, with LGM emissions substantially reduced in comparison to the early Holocene and preindustrial states due to lower temperature, CO2, and soil carbon. Depending on the future climate scenario, these dependencies then lead to further increases in CH4, with a further doubling of atmospheric CH4 easily possible if one of the higher radiative forcing scenarios is followed. Furthermore, the future increases in CH4 will persist for a long time, as CH4 only decreases when the climate system cools again.

How to cite: Kleinen, T., Gromov, S., Steil, B., and Brovkin, V.: Methane in the climate system -- from the last glacial to the future, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12440, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12440, 2021.

EGU21-14136 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Using paleoclimate data to constrain cloud parameterizations in GISS-E2.1

Riovie D. Ramos, Allegra N. LeGrande, Michael L. Griffiths, Gregory S. Elsaesser, Daniel T. Litchmore, Jessica E. Tierney, Francesco S. R. Pausata, and Jesse Nusbaumer

Much of the inter-model spread in equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) estimates is attributed to cloud and convective parameterizations which model cloud and water vapor feedbacks. These parameterizations also directly influence water isotopes, which may be retrieved not only from modern observations, but also a plethora of paleoclimate archives that represent a much broader range of variability than is available in modern measurements. And thus, these water isotope tracers can be used to constrain ECS by flagging unrealistic parts of the parameterization phase space via model biases in a perturbed parameterization ensemble (PPE) of paleoclimate simulations. In this proof-of-concept study, we evaluate a suite of isotope-enabled atmosphere-only GISS-E2.1 simulations, each with varying cloud and convective perturbations, against speleothem and ice core δ18O for the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 21000 years ago), mid-Holocene (MH, 6000 years ago) and pre-Industrial periods. The first-order spatial pattern of δ18O of precipitation (δ18Op) is in excellent agreement between proxy data and all parameterizations across all time periods. While the simulations generally capture large scale δ18Op patterns, the magnitude of change is consistently smaller in all simulations than those of the proxies, highlighting uncertainties in both models and proxies. Not a single set of parameterizations worked well in all climate states, indicating that improving future simulations requires determining all plausible parameter combinations critical in refining ECS. Further, it may be that certain parameterization choices represent certain types of variability better than others, and there may be a non-unique solution to ideal clouds/convection parameterization choices that is modulated by the question asked.

How to cite: Ramos, R. D., LeGrande, A. N., Griffiths, M. L., Elsaesser, G. S., Litchmore, D. T., Tierney, J. E., Pausata, F. S. R., and Nusbaumer, J.: Using paleoclimate data to constrain cloud parameterizations in GISS-E2.1, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14136, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14136, 2021.

EGU21-2305 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Sensitivity of simulated oxygen isotopes in ice cores and speleothems to Last Glacial Maximum surface conditions

André Paul, Alexandre Cauquoin, Stefan Mulitza, Thejna Tharammal, and Martin Werner

In simulations of the climate during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), we employ two different isotope-enabled atmospheric general circulation models (NCAR iCAM3 and MPI ECHAM6-wiso) and use simulated (by coupled climate models) as well as reconstructed (from a new global climatology of the ocean surface duing the LGM, GLOMAP) surface conditions.

The resulting atmospheric fields reflect the more pronounced structure and gradients in the reconstructions, for example, the precipitation is more depleted in oxygen-18 in the high latitudes and more enriched in low latitudes, especially in the tropical convective regions over the maritime continent in the equatorial Pacific and Indian Oceans and over the equatorial Atlantic Ocean. Furthermore, at the sites of ice cores and speleothems, the model-data fit improves in terms of the coefficients of determination and root-mean square errors.

In additional sensitivity experiments, we also use the climatologies by Annan and Hargreaves (2013) and Tierney et al. (2020) and consider the impact of changes in reconstructed sea-ice extent and the global-mean sea-surface temperature.

Our findings imply that the correct simulation or reconstruction of patterns and gradients in sea-surface conditions are crucial for a successful comparison to oxygen-isotope data from ice cores and speleothems.

How to cite: Paul, A., Cauquoin, A., Mulitza, S., Tharammal, T., and Werner, M.: Sensitivity of simulated oxygen isotopes in ice cores and speleothems to Last Glacial Maximum surface conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2305, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2305, 2021.

EGU21-11047 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Reconstructing the surface temperature fields of the Last Glacial Maximum and mid-Pliocene Warm Period using climate models and data.

James Annan, Julia Hargreaves, and Thorsten Mauritsen

We present new reconstructions of global climatological temperature fields for the Last Glacial Maximum and the mid-Pliocene Warm Period.

The method is based on an Ensemble Kalman Smoother which combines globally complete modelled temperature fields, with sparse proxy-based estimates of local temperature anomalies. This ensures spatially coherent fields which respect physical principles and which are also tied closely to observational estimates. 

For the Last Glacial Maximum, we use the full set of PMIP2/3/4 model simulations, and we combine this with a wide range of proxy-based SST and SAT estimates of local temperature to ensure the best possible global coverage. Our reconstruction has a global mean surface air temperature anomaly of -5.3 +- 0.9C relative to the pre-industrial climate, and thus lies roughly half-way between the estimates of Annan and Hargreaves (2013) and Tierney et al (2020). We examine the reasons for these differences and discuss their implications.

For the mid-Pliocene Warm Period, we use the PlioMIP 1 and 2 model simulations and the PRISM proxy estimates for the 3.2 Ma time slice. These data are considerably more sparse and uncertain than for the LGM and our reconstruction is correspondingly more uncertain. We obtain an estimate of 5.6 +- 1.6C which is considerably warmer than most previous estimates, suggesting a significant discrepancy between the models and the data. We investigate the reasons for this and discuss the implications.

How to cite: Annan, J., Hargreaves, J., and Mauritsen, T.: Reconstructing the surface temperature fields of the Last Glacial Maximum and mid-Pliocene Warm Period using climate models and data., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11047, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11047, 2021.

EGU21-9847 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Last Glacial to present-day variability of surface climate from oxygen isotope signatures in speleothems and model simulations

Janica Buehler, Nils Weitzel, Jean-Philippe Baudouin, Martin Werner, and Kira Rehfeld

Comparing simulations and data from paleoclimate archives such as speleothems can test the capability of climate models to capture past climate changes. In past, present, and future, the hydrologic response to radiative forcing changes is far less understood and more uncertain than thermal changes.
 
Speleothems store terrestrial climate information in the form of isotopic oxygen in mineral and are found mostly in the low-to mid-latitudes of the landmasses. Their usually well preserved (semi-)continuous time series of oxygen isotope ratio δ18O can cover full Glacial-Interglacial cycles and are used for past climate reconstructions. However, the measured δ18O in the mineral is influenced by multiple climate and cave-related variables and does, therefore, not directly represent past temperature or precipitation. 

We assess the capability of the isotope-enabled models HadCM3 and ECHAM5-MPI/OM to simulate decadal to centennial climate variability beyond the instrumental period. In particular, we investigate the relationship between simulated δ18O and precipitation variability under different background conditions. By comparing simulated δ18O values at cave locations to the large global speleothem database SISALv2 (Comas-Bru et al. 2020), we also examine the consistency between modeled and archived temporal changes in δ18O in the mean state and variability. Our strategy involves forward-modeling of cave processes such as temperature-dependent fractionation and transit times to constrain a simple speleothem proxy model for the simulation output. For the late Holocene, we observe a strongly underestimated simulated isotopic variability on decadal to centennial timescales. We further test how much this underestimation depends on the background radiative forcing conditions by comparing the Last Glacial Maximum, the mid-Holocene, and the late Holocene. This provides deeper insight on low to mid-latitude state-dependent climate variability on decadal to centennial time scales. 

Reference:

Comas-Bru, L., et. al. SISALv2: a comprehensive speleothem isotope database with multiple age-depth models. Earth System Science Data 12, 2579-2606 (2020) https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/12/2579/2020/

How to cite: Buehler, J., Weitzel, N., Baudouin, J.-P., Werner, M., and Rehfeld, K.: Last Glacial to present-day variability of surface climate from oxygen isotope signatures in speleothems and model simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9847, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9847, 2021.

EGU21-12889 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Tracking the sources of water isotopes in water vapor and monsoon precipitation over India using iCESM1.2 simulations

Thejna Tharammal, Govindasamy Bala, and Jesse Nusbaumer

Stable isotopes of water are common proxies used to reconstruct the past precipitation in the tropics, based on the climate-dependent fractionation of the water molecule. Hence, an investigation of the factors affecting the present-day isotope ratios in precipitation in the tropical monsoon regimes could aid the interpretation of the paleo-proxies. Along with the degree of rainouts and strength of convection, the isotope ratios in precipitation over a region depend on the source of water vapor. We use the water vapor-isotope tagging capabilities in the isotope-enabled earth system model iCESM1.2 to estimate the relative contribution of different oceanic sources and regional land water recycling to the present-day distribution of precipitation and isotope ratios in precipitation in the Indian land region. We choose two major precipitation seasons for our study – the Southwest monsoon [SW, June to September], the major contributor of annual precipitation in the region, and the Northeast monsoon [NE, October to December] that is important for the annual precipitation in the southern Indian region. It is expected that these two monsoon seasons should have different major sources of water vapor because of the reversal in monsoon circulation between these two seasons. Preliminary results suggest that the model can reproduce the seasonal distribution of precipitation and water isotopes in precipitation in the Indian region. The water-tagging method successfully identifies the sources of precipitation in the Indian region. The detailed results of this study will be presented at the meeting.

How to cite: Tharammal, T., Bala, G., and Nusbaumer, J.: Tracking the sources of water isotopes in water vapor and monsoon precipitation over India using iCESM1.2 simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12889, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12889, 2021.

EGU21-2476 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Workflow and tools to analyse the PMIP4-CMIP6 ensemble

Anni Zhao and Chris Brierley

Experiment outputs are now available from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project’s 6th phase (CMIP6) and the past climate experiments defined in the Model Intercomparison Project’s 4th phase (PMIP4). All of this output is freely available from the Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF). Yet there are overheads in analysing this resource that may prove complicated or prohibitive. Here we document the steps taken by ourselves to produce ensemble analyses covering past and future simulations. We outline the strategy used to curate, adjust the monthly calendar aggregation and process the information downloaded from the ESGF. The results of these steps were used to perform analysis for several of the initial publications arising from PMIP4. We provide post-processed fields for each simulation, such as climatologies and common measures of variability. Example scripts used to visualise and analyse these fields is provided for several important case studies.

How to cite: Zhao, A. and Brierley, C.: Workflow and tools to analyse the PMIP4-CMIP6 ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2476, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2476, 2021.

EGU21-9683 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Towards model-data comparison of the deglacial temperature evolution in space and time

Nils Weitzel, Heather Andres, Jean-Philippe Baudouin, Oliver Bothe, Andrew Dolman, Lukas Jonkers, Marie Kapsch, Thomas Kleinen, Maximilian May, Uwe Mikolajewicz, Andre Paul, and Kira Rehfeld

The increasing number of Earth system model simulations that try to simulate the climate during the last deglaciation (ca 20 to 10 thousand years ago) creates a demand for benchmarking against environmental proxy records synthesized for the same time period. Comparing these two data sources over a period with changing background conditions requires new methods for model-data comparison that incorporate multiple types and sources of uncertainty.

Natural archives of past reality are distributed sparsely and non-uniformly in space and time. Signals that can be obtained are in addition perturbed by uncertainties related to dating, the relationship between the proxy sensor and environmental fields, the archive build-up, and measurement. On the other hand, paleoclimate simulations are four-dimensional, complete, and physically consistent representations of the climate. However, they are subject to errors due to model inadequacies and sensitivity to the forcing protocol, and will not reproduce any particular history of unforced variability. 

We present a method for probabilistic, multivariate quantification of the deviation between paleo-data and paleoclimate simulations that draws on the strengths of both sources of information and accounts for the aforementioned uncertainties. We compare the shape and magnitude of orbital- and millennial-scale temperature fluctuations during the last deglaciation and compute metrics of regional and global model-data mismatches. We test our algorithm with an ensemble of published simulations of the deglaciation and simulations from the ongoing PalMod project, which aims at the simulation of the last glacial cycle with comprehensive Earth system models. These are evaluated against a compilation of temperature reconstructions from multiple archives. Our work aims for a standardized model-data comparison workflow that will be used in PalMod. This workflow can be extended subsequently with additional proxy data, new simulations, and improved representations of proxy uncertainties. 

How to cite: Weitzel, N., Andres, H., Baudouin, J.-P., Bothe, O., Dolman, A., Jonkers, L., Kapsch, M., Kleinen, T., May, M., Mikolajewicz, U., Paul, A., and Rehfeld, K.: Towards model-data comparison of the deglacial temperature evolution in space and time, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9683, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9683, 2021.

EGU21-5716 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Model-data comparison challenges in paleo-climate analyses: Towards an evaluation toolbox for transient climate model simulations 

Jean-Philippe Baudouin, Oliver Bothe, Manuel Chevalier, Nils Weitzel, Anne Dallmeyer, Chris Brierley, and Kira Rehfeld

Modelling studies are evaluated by comparing the simulation outputs to an observational reference. In climate science, the number and complexity of the models and the mass of data have led the community to develop standardised methods and automated tools, such as the Climate Variability Diagnostic Package or the ESMValTool. However, these tools are mostly designed to evaluate simulations of the instrumental period. Different methods are required to compare paleoclimate simulations to palaeodataFor example, new variables are being modelled, such as vegetation, ice sheet extent, or isotopic ratio, and are used for the evaluation. Changing boundary conditions in transient simulations further complicate the evaluation process: traditional indices that characterise circulation (e.g. monsoon) or modes of variability (e.g. NAO, ENSO) need to be adapted, while new ones are needed to investigate modes of longer timescale and abrupt events. Finally, the palaeodata also present challenges: various type of uncertainty, complex relation to climate variables, and different spatio-temporal representativeness compared to model outputs. Here, we summarise the challenges of model-data comparison in paleo-climate studies. We then review some of the different methods and tools already developed by the community, such as biome comparison and Bayesian approaches to quantify model-data deviation. We finally discuss the implementation of an evaluation framework which aims to provide both adaptable tools to the community and automated standardised analyses.

How to cite: Baudouin, J.-P., Bothe, O., Chevalier, M., Weitzel, N., Dallmeyer, A., Brierley, C., and Rehfeld, K.: Model-data comparison challenges in paleo-climate analyses: Towards an evaluation toolbox for transient climate model simulations , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5716, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5716, 2021.

The increasing availability of time-evolving or transient palaeoclimatic simulations makes it imperative to develop “best-practices” for comparing simulations with palaeoclimatic observations including both climate reconstructions and environmental data.  There are two sets of considerations, temporal and spatial, that should guide those comparisons.  The chronology of simulations can in some ways be viewed as exact, as determined by the insolation forcing, but data archiving and reporting conventions, such as reporting summaries that use the modern calendar (that leads to the long-recognized palaeo-calendar effect) can, if ignored, lead to “built-in” temporal offsets of thousands of years in such features as temperature or precipitation maxima or minima.  Likewise, there are age uncertainties in time series of palaeoclimatic data that are often ignored, despite the fact that these are large during “climatically interesting times” such as the Younger Dryas chronozone.  Similarly, although model resolution is increasing, there is still a mismatch in topography (and its climatic effects) between a model and the “real world” sensed by the palaeoclimatic data sources. 

There are existing approaches for dealing with some of these issues, such as calendar-adjustment programs, Monte-Carlo approaches for describing age uncertainties in palaeoclimate time series, or clustering approaches for objectively defining appropriate regions for the calculation of area averages, but there is certainly room for further development.  This abstract is intended to serve as platform for discussion of some of best practices for data-model comparisons in transient mode.

How to cite: Bartlein, P. and Harrison, S.: Temporal and spatial considerations in data-model comparisons involving transient paleoclimatic simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6799, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6799, 2021.

EGU21-11006 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

State-dependency of temperature variability in transient simulations of the last Deglaciation from models of varying complexity

Elisa Ziegler, Heather Andres, Beatrice Ellerhoff, Marie-Luise Kapsch, Steffen Kutterolf, Uwe Mikolajewicz, Julie Christin Schindlbeck-Belo, Matthew Toohey, Christian Wirths, Nils Weitzel, and Kira Rehfeld

Much about the response of temperature variability to a change in the climate's mean state, as the one projected for the current century, remains uncertain. These uncertainties include spatiotemporal patterns, the magnitude, and, in some cases, even the sign. For the last Deglaciation, - the last change in global mean temperature of a similar degree to that expected in projections - variability analyses of climate model simulations and temperature proxies produce conflicting results. 

Here, we build a hierarchy of transient simulations covering the period since the Last Glacial Maximum about 26k years ago. We include a range of climate models, from conceptual to complex Earth System Models. The simulations cover a variety of temporal and spatial resolutions, parameterizations, and modeled processes. For annual to multi-millennial temporal as well as regional to global spatial scales, we compare variability patterns and power spectra and analyze how they relate to model properties and the background state of Earth's climate. This allows for the examination of regional temperature differences between low, middle, and high latitudes and at locations of available paleoclimate proxy records. For sets of sensitivity experiments, we investigate effects of changes to ice sheets, sea ice, and in volcanic, solar, greenhouse, and orbital forcing on modeled climate variability.  

Thus, our analysis provides insights into when and how models disagree with each other and with proxies, and what differences arise due to specific models, simulation setups, and boundary conditions. Based on these results, we can then gauge the degree of complexity which is required to reproduce past temperature variability and predict its changes in the future. 

How to cite: Ziegler, E., Andres, H., Ellerhoff, B., Kapsch, M.-L., Kutterolf, S., Mikolajewicz, U., Schindlbeck-Belo, J. C., Toohey, M., Wirths, C., Weitzel, N., and Rehfeld, K.: State-dependency of temperature variability in transient simulations of the last Deglaciation from models of varying complexity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11006, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11006, 2021.

Fossil pollen datasets can help to understand the temporal and spatial distribution patterns and driving forces of the past terrestrial biomes in high northern latitudes. Here we present a global pollen dataset since the Last Glacial Maximum, synthesized from 2821 palynological records from the Neotoma Paleoecology Database and additional literature. All terrestrial pollen taxa were taxonomically harmonized on genus (woody taxa) or family level (herb taxa) and temporally standardized by using a defined parameter setting for Bayesian age-depth modeling based on 14C dating. The age-depth models were statistically compared with existing models for each record. With a biomization approach, we reconstructed biomes for several time-slices throughout the last 22000 years with a temporal resolution of roughly 500 years. The reconstructed biome distributions are compared to simulated biome distributions inferred from a transient simulation for the last 25000 years, performed in the comprehensive Earth System Model of the Max Planck Institute (MPI-ESM). The overall biome trend agrees well, but the simulation shows lower forest cover in the high northern latitudes and reaches the maximum forest cover in the Holocene much earlier than the reconstructions indicate.

How to cite: Li, C., Dallmeyer, A., Böhmer, T., Postl, A., and Herzschuh, U.: Northern hemispheric biome changes synthesized from taxonomically harmonized and temporally standardized fossil pollen record since the Last Glacial Maximum in comparison to MPI-ESM simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12224, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12224, 2021.

EGU21-3550 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Last Glacial Maximum Antarctic sea ice linked with global mean ocean temperature: evidence from PMIP3, PMIP4 and MIROC-4m simulations

Tristan Vadsaria, Sam Sherriff-Tadano, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, Takashi Obase, Wing-Le Chan, and Xavier Crosta

Southern Ocean sea ice and oceanic fronts are known to play an important role on the climate system, carbon cycles, bottom ocean circulation, and Antarctic ice sheet. However, many models of the previous Past-climate Model Intercomparison Project (PMIP) underestimated sea-ice extent (SIE) for the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)(Roche et al., 2012; Marzocchi and Jensen, 2017), mainly because of surface bias (Flato et al., 2013) that may have an impact on mean ocean temperature (MOT). Indeed, recent studies further suggest an important link between Southern Ocean sea ice and mean ocean temperature (Ferrari et al., 2014; Bereiter et al., 2018 among others). Misrepresent the Antarctic sea-ice extent could highly impact deep ocean circulation, the heat transport and thus the MOT. In this study, we will stress the relationship between the distribution of Antarctic sea-ice extent and the MOT through the analysis of the PMIP3 and PMIP4 exercise and by using a set of MIROC models. To date, the latest version of MIROC improve its representation of the LGM Antarctic sea-ice extent, affecting the deep circulation and the MOT distribution (Sherriff-Tadano et al., under review).

Our results show that available PMIP4 models have an overall improvement in term of LGM sea-ice extent compared to PMIP3, associated to colder deep and bottom ocean temperature. Focusing on MIROC (4m) models, we show that models accounting for Southern Ocean sea-surface temperature (SST) bias correction reproduce an Antarctic sea-ice extent, 2D-distribution, and seasonal amplitude in good agreement with proxy-based data. Finally, using PMIP-MIROC analyze, we show that it exists a relationship between the maximum SIE and the MOT, modulated by the Antarctic intermediate and bottom waters.

How to cite: Vadsaria, T., Sherriff-Tadano, S., Abe-Ouchi, A., Obase, T., Chan, W.-L., and Crosta, X.: Last Glacial Maximum Antarctic sea ice linked with global mean ocean temperature: evidence from PMIP3, PMIP4 and MIROC-4m simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3550, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3550, 2021.

EGU21-15463 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Simulation of LGM ice sheets with the Community Earth System Model version 2 

Sarah L Bradley, Michele Petrini, Raymond Sellevold, Miren Vizcaino, William H. Lipscomb, and Sotiria Georgiou

The last deglaciation provides as unique a framework to investigate the processes of ice sheet and climate interaction during periods of mass loss as in the current climate. Here we simulate the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) northern hemisphere ice sheets climate, surface mass balance (SMB), and dynamics with the Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2, Danabasoglu et al., 2020)) and the Community Ice Sheet Model version 2 (CISM2, Lipscomb et al., 2019). This LGM simulation will be later used as starting point for coupled CESM2-CISM2 simulations of the last deglaciation.

 

CESM2 is run at the nominal resolution used for IPCC-type projections (approx. 1 degree for all components). The model includes an advanced snow/firn and SMB calculation (van Kampenhout et al, 2019; Sellevold et al, 2019) the land component (CLM, cite) that has been evaluated and applied to the simulation of the future Greenland melt (van Kampenhout et al, 2020, Muntjewerf et al., 2020a,b, Sellevold & Vizcaino, 2020).

 

Our analysis examines how the global, Arctic, and North Atlantic climate result in the simulated radiative and turbulent heat fluxes over the ice sheets, and the mass fluxes from precipitation, refreezing, runoff, and sublimation. We also examine the simulated ice streams in CISM2, which is run at 8 km under a higher-order approximation for ice flow.

How to cite: Bradley, S. L., Petrini, M., Sellevold, R., Vizcaino, M., Lipscomb, W. H., and Georgiou, S.: Simulation of LGM ice sheets with the Community Earth System Model version 2 , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15463, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15463, 2021.

EGU21-8730 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Possible pathways to a Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) PMIP protocol

Irene Malmierca-Vallet, Louise C. Sime, and Paul J. Valdes

The DO events of the last ice age represent one of the best studied abrupt climate transitions, yet we still lack a comprehensive explanation for them. There is uncertainty whether current IPCC-relevant models can effectively represent the processes that cause DO events. Current Earth system models (ESMs) seem overly stable against external perturbations and incapable of reproducing most abrupt climate changes of the past (Valdes, 2011). If this holds true, this could noticeably influence their capability to predict future abrupt transitions, with significant consequences for the delivery of precise climate change projections.  In this task, the objectives of this study are (1) to cross compare existing simulations that show spontaneous DO-type oscillations using a common set of diagnostics so we can compare the mechanisms and the characteristics of the oscillations, and (2) to formulate possible pathways to a DO PMIP protocol that could help investigate cold-period instabilities through a range of insolation-, freshwater-, GHG-, and NH ice sheet-related forcings, as well as evaluating the possibility of spontaneous internal oscillations.

Although most abrupt DO events happened during MIS3, only few studies investigate DO events in coupled general circulation models under MIS 3 conditions (e.g., Kawamura et al., 2017; Zhang and Prange, 2020). Here, we thus propose that the MIS3 period could be the focus of such a DO-event modelling protocol. More specific sensitivity experiments performed under MIS 3 boundary conditions are needed in order to (1) better understand the mechanisms behind millennial-scale climate variability, (2) explore AMOC variability under intermediate glacial conditions, and (3) help answer the question: “are models too stable?”.

How to cite: Malmierca-Vallet, I., Sime, L. C., and Valdes, P. J.: Possible pathways to a Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) PMIP protocol, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8730, 2021.

EGU21-6693 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Exploring the complex uncertainties in coupled climate-ice simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum

Lauren Gregoire, Niall Gandy, Lachlan Astfalck, Robin Smith, Ruza Ivanovic, Daniel Williamson, and Jonathan Gregory

Simulating the co-evolution of climate and ice-sheets during the Quaternary is key to understanding some of the major abrupt changes in climate, ice and sea level. Indeed, events such as the Meltwater pulse 1a rapid sea level rise and Heinrich, Dansgaard–Oeschger and the 8.2 kyr climatic events all involve the interplay between ice sheets, the atmosphere and the ocean. Unfortunately, it is challenging to simulate the coupled Climate-Ice sheet system because small biases, errors or uncertainties in parts of the models are strongly amplified by the powerful interactions between the atmosphere and ice (e.g. ice-albedo and height-mass balance feedbacks). This leads to inaccurate or even unrealistic simulations of ice sheet extent and surface climate. To overcome this issue we need some methods to effectively explore the uncertainty in the complex Climate-Ice sheet system and reduce model biases. Here we present our approach to produce ensemble of coupled Climate-Ice sheet simulations of the Last Glacial maximum that explore the uncertainties in climate and ice sheet processes.

We use the FAMOUS-ICE earth system model, which comprises a coarse-resolution and fast general circulation model coupled to the Glimmer-CISM ice sheet model. We prescribe sea surface temperature and sea ice concentrations in order to control and reduce biases in polar climate, which strongly affect the surface mass balance and simulated extent of the northern hemisphere ice sheets. We develop and apply a method to reconstruct and sample a range of realistic sea surface temperature and sea-ice concentration spatio-temporal field. These are created by merging information from PMIP3/4 climate simulations and proxy-data for sea surface temperatures at the Last Glacial Maximum with Bayes linear analysis. We then use these to generate ensembles of FAMOUS-ice simulations of the Last Glacial maximum following the PMIP4 protocol, with the Greenland and North American ice sheets interactively simulated. In addition to exploring a range of sea surface conditions, we also vary key parameters that control the surface mass balance and flow of ice sheets. We thus produce ensembles of simulations that will later be used to emulate ice sheet surface mass balance.  

How to cite: Gregoire, L., Gandy, N., Astfalck, L., Smith, R., Ivanovic, R., Williamson, D., and Gregory, J.: Exploring the complex uncertainties in coupled climate-ice simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6693, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6693, 2021.

EGU21-7297 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

The impact of bathymetry on the simulated carbon at the Last Glacial Maximum

Fanny Lhardy, Nathaelle Bouttes, Didier Roche, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, Zanna Chase, Ruza Ivanovic, Markus Jochum, Masa Kageyama, Hidetaka Kobayashi, Laurie Menviel, Juan Muglia, Roman Nuterman, Akira Oka, Andreas Schmittner, Guido Vettoretti, and Akitomo Yamamoto

Understanding the processes causing variations in the carbon cycle is critical to accurately simulate the future carbon cycle and climate. Paleoclimate models can provide insights about these processes since they are used under different conditions than present-day’s and evaluated against paleoproxy data. In particular, the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) has been a focus of the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP) as it is well-documented thanks to numerous paleoclimate archives. Around 21,000 years ago, the LGM was a colder period with extensive ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere and a resulting lower sea-level. Although this period has been studied for years, the causes of the lower atmospheric CO2 concentration at the time (around 186 ppm, against 280 ppm at the pre-industrial) remain unclear, and models struggle to simulate this low CO2 value. The ocean is thought to have played a significant role due to different processes (through changes of the biological pump efficiency, ocean circulation, sea-ice, and CO2 solubility due to colder temperatures), but no consensus has been reached yet as to their contribution (Khatiwala et al. [2019], Yu et al. [2016], Marzocchi and Jansen [2019]).

Despite the carbon cycle being simulated by more and more climate models, it has not been systematically analysed within the framework of PMIP multimodel comparisons. In this context, the ongoing PMIP-carbon project aims at comparing climate-carbon interactions in LGM simulations, and includes results from both intermediate complexity models and general circulation models. The PMIP protocol proposes standardized forcing parameters and boundary conditions (Kageyama et al. [2017]) and specifies a few recommendations for ocean biogeochemistry models (adjustment of salinity, dissolved inorganic carbon, alkalinity, and nutrients to account for the change in ocean volume). Indeed, the bathymetric changes associated with a sea-level drop of 133 m entail a change of the reservoir size and potential technical issues concerning the conservation of carbon.

In this study, we use outputs from PMIP-carbon models and other models available on the ESGF (MIROC4m-COCO, MIROC-ES2L, CESM, IPSL-CM5A2, UVic, LOVECLIM, iLOVECLIM, CLIMBER_2P ; GISS-E2-R, MRI-CGCM3, MPI-ESM-P, CNRM-CM5, MIROC-ESM) to compute total ocean volumes and compare them to high resolution topographic data (etopo1 for the PI, GLAC-1D and ICE-6G-C for the LGM). We show that the deglacial volume change is rarely accurate. We then use the iLOVECLIM model with a new bathymetry implementation method (Lhardy et al. [in review, 2020]) to demonstrate the effect of an improved ocean volume on the simulated oceanic carbon content, resulting in an increase of the already overestimated atmospheric CO2 concentration. We also quantify the effect of the mentioned adjustments of salinity, alkalinity, and carbon. The results reinforce the idea that a realistic ocean volume is needed, as well as consistency between models in dealing with large changes in bathymetry.

How to cite: Lhardy, F., Bouttes, N., Roche, D., Abe-Ouchi, A., Chase, Z., Ivanovic, R., Jochum, M., Kageyama, M., Kobayashi, H., Menviel, L., Muglia, J., Nuterman, R., Oka, A., Schmittner, A., Vettoretti, G., and Yamamoto, A.: The impact of bathymetry on the simulated carbon at the Last Glacial Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7297, 2021.

EGU21-8652 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

Different ice sheets – different AMOC? Revisiting the ice-sheet effect on the LGM AMOC

Marlene Klockmann, Marie-Luise Kapsch, and Uwe Mikolajewicz

Coupled climate models have produced very different states of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). In particular, many of them failed to capture the shoaling of the upper AMOC cell, which was indicated by reconstructions. In sensitivity simulations with the Max-Planck-Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM) we found that the glacial AMOC response is the sum of two large opposing effects: a strengthening and deepening of the upper cell in response to the glacial ice sheets and a weakening and shoaling of the upper cell in response to the low glacial greenhouse gas concentrations. The magnitude of the respective effects likely depends on the background climate, the ice sheet reconstruction used, and model specifics such as the representation of brine release in the Southern Ocean.

Transient simulations of the deglaciation with two differently tuned versions of MPI-ESM and two different ice-sheet reconstructions differ strongly in their respective AMOC states during the LGM. These simulations, together with selected PMIP3 and PMIP4 LGM simulations, provide a good opportunity to compare the effect of different ice sheet reconstructions on the glacial AMOC. We compare key variables such as water mass properties, salt transport and Southern Ocean sea-ice formation across this ensemble of opportunity with the aim of increasing our understanding of the role of ice sheets in the glacial AMOC response.

How to cite: Klockmann, M., Kapsch, M.-L., and Mikolajewicz, U.: Different ice sheets – different AMOC? Revisiting the ice-sheet effect on the LGM AMOC, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8652, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8652, 2021.

EGU21-8776 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Impact of ice sheet reconstructions on the deglacial climate in iLOVECLIM

Nathaelle Bouttes, Didier Roche, Fanny Lhardy, Aurelien Quiquet, Didier Paillard, and Hugues Goosse

The last deglaciation is a time of large climate transition from a cold Last Glacial Maximum at 21,000 years BP with extensive ice sheets, to the warmer Holocene 9,000 years BP onwards with reduced ice sheets. Despite more and more proxy data documenting this transition, the evolution of climate is not fully understood and difficult to simulate. The PMIP4 protocol (Ivanovic et al., 2016) has indicated which boundary conditions to use in model simulations during this transition. The common boundary conditions should enable consistent multi model and model-data comparisons. While the greenhouse gas concentration evolution and orbital forcing are well known and easy to prescribe, the evolution of ice sheets is less well constrained and several choices can be made by modelling groups. First, two ice sheet reconstructions are available: ICE-6G (Peltier et al., 2015) and GLAC-1D (Tarasov et al., 2014). On top of topographic changes, it is left to modelling groups to decide whether to account for the associated bathymetry and land-sea mask changes, which is technically more demanding. These choices could potentially lead to differences in the climate evolution, making model comparisons more complicated.

We use the iLOVECLIM model of intermediate complexity (Goosse et al., 2010) to evaluate the impact of different ice sheet reconstructions and the effect of bathymetry changes on the global climate evolution during the Last deglaciation. We test the two ice sheet reconstructions (ICE-6G and GLAC-1D), and have implemented changes of bathymetry and land-sea mask. In addition, we also evaluate the impact of accounting for the Antarctic ice sheet evolution compared to the Northern ice sheets only.

We show that despite showing the same long-term changes, the two reconstructions lead to different evolutions. The bathymetry plays a role, although only few changes take place before ~14ka. Finally, the impact of the Antarctic ice sheet is important during the deglaciation and should not be neglected.

References

Goosse, H., et al., Description of the Earth system model of intermediate complexity LOVECLIM version 1.2, Geosci. Model Dev., 3, 603–633, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-3-603-2010, 2010

Ivanovic, R. F., et al., Transient climate simulations of the deglaciation 21–9 thousand years before present (version 1) – PMIP4 Core experiment design and boundary conditions, Geosci. Model Dev., 9, 2563–2587, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-2563-2016, 2016

Peltier, W. R., Argus, D. F., and Drummond, R., Space geodesy constrains ice age terminal deglaciation: The global ICE-6G_C (VM5a) model, J. Geophys. Res.-Sol. Ea., 120, 450–487, doi:10.1002/2014JB011176, 2015

Tarasov,L.,  et al., The global GLAC-1c deglaciation chronology, melwater pulse 1-a, and a question of missing ice, IGS Symposium on Contribution of Glaciers and Ice Sheets to Sea-Level Change, 2014

How to cite: Bouttes, N., Roche, D., Lhardy, F., Quiquet, A., Paillard, D., and Goosse, H.: Impact of ice sheet reconstructions on the deglacial climate in iLOVECLIM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8776, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8776, 2021.

EGU21-2278 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2 | Highlight

The last deglaciation simulated with a coupled atmosphere/ocean/ice sheet/solid earth model

Uwe Mikolajewicz, Olga Erokhina, Marie-Luise Kapsch, Clemens Schannwell, and Florian Ziemen

It is challenging to model the last deglaciation, as it is characterized by abrupt millennial scale climate events, such as ice-sheet surges, that are superimposed on long-term climate changes, such as a global warming and the decay of a substantial part of the glacial ice sheets. Within PMIP, several groups have simulated the last deglaciation with CMIP-type models prescribing ice sheets from reconstructions. Whereas this type of simulations accounts for the effects of ice-sheet changes including meltwater release on climate, the prescribed ice sheet evolution is typically not consistent with the simulated climate evolution. Here we present a set of deglacial simulations that include fully interactive ice sheets that respond to changes in the climate. The setup also allows for feedbacks between ice sheets and climate and , hence, allows for a more realistic representation of the mechanisms of the last deglaciation, as the simulated climate and ice sheet changes are fully consistent..

The model consists of the coarse resolution set-up of MPI-ESM coupled to the ice sheet model mPISM (Northern Hemisphere and Antarctica) and the solid earth model VILMA. The model includes interactive icebergs and an automated calculation of the land-sea mask and river routing directions. A set of synchronously coupled simulations were started from an asynchronously coupled spin-up at 26ky and integrated throughout the deglaciation into the Holocene. The only prescribed external forcing are atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases and earth orbital parameters. One goal of this ensemble was to find the optimal combination of model parameters for the simulation of the deglaciation.

The model simulates the decay of the ice sheets, the rise of sea level, the flooding of shelf seas and the opening of passages. A large fraction of the ice sheet retreat is due to dynamical events (e.g. the final decay of the ice sheets on Barents Shelf or the Hudson Bay). Superimposed on the relatively slow glacial/interglacial transition are abrupt climate changes, triggered for example by recurrent ice sheet surges. These surges correspond to Heinrich Events tand result in a weakening of the AMOC. Three source regions for ice sheet surges occur during these simulations: from the Laurentide ice sheet through Hudson Strait, from the Laurentide ice sheet northward directly to the Arctic ocean, and from the Fennoscandian ice sheet into the Norwegian Sea. The characteristic climate response shows a large dependence on the surge location.

The simulated changes in strength of the AMOC are except for millennial-scale reduction events only moderate. However, during glacial periods, brine release is the central process for deep water formation in both hemispheres, in contrast to the Holocene. dDuring the deglaciation the ventilation of the deep ocean is strongly reduced, leading to a strong increase of the simulated deep water ages. This effect lasts longest in the deep North Pacific and extends in some simulations into the Holocene.

How to cite: Mikolajewicz, U., Erokhina, O., Kapsch, M.-L., Schannwell, C., and Ziemen, F.: The last deglaciation simulated with a coupled atmosphere/ocean/ice sheet/solid earth model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2278, 2021.

EGU21-8724 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Meltwater driven abrupt climate changes in the North Atlantic simulated in a Heinrich Stadial 1 background

Yvan Romé, Ruza Ivanovic, and Lauren Gregoire

Heinrich stadial 1 is one of the most enigmatic episodes in the study of the last deglaciation. Following the Lamospheric forcing increased driving the vast ice sheets over North America and Europe to melt. Yet, the climate in the North Atlantic remained cold for another 6000 years before eventually switching to a warm interstadial state in an event referred to as the Bolling warming. If there is now a consensus on the central role of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), the mechanisms at stake are still highly debated, which is a real challenge when it comes to reproducing such behaviour in climate models.

We studied this period looking spest Glacial Maximum (LGM, ~21 thousand years ago), orbital and atcifically at the feedback between the climate and the freshwater released from melting ice. From a transient record of meltwater discharge across the last deglaciation derived from the GLAC1D ice sheet reconstruction, we produced General Circulation Model (GCM) simulations of the LGM climate with different freshwater forcing. More precisely, we examined three notable melting events that happened during the early deglaciation: a local minimum of discharge at the LGM, a peak in meltwater discharging the North Atlantic signal and a peak in meltwater discharging in the Arctic signal. The three experiments generated very different patterns in AMOC and in North Atlantic climate, including alternatively warm, cold and oscillating regimes depending on the forcing.  

These results provide a good framework to analyse further the relationship between abrupt climate changes and meltwater discharge and to highlight the key parameters to trigger climate transitions in state-of-art climate models in the context of the last deglaciation. It is also a great opportunity to describe some mechanisms at stake with salt oscillations in the Atlantic, sea-ice cover and deep-water formation sites feedback and shifts in the subpolar gyre during interstadial-stadial transitions.

How to cite: Romé, Y., Ivanovic, R., and Gregoire, L.: Meltwater driven abrupt climate changes in the North Atlantic simulated in a Heinrich Stadial 1 background, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8724, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8724, 2021.

EGU21-12829 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Hudson valley floods an unlikely trigger for Inter-Allerød Cold Period (IACP) cooling 13,300 years ago

Simon Pendleton, Alan Condron, and Jeffrey Donnelly

It has long been hypothesized that periodic meltwater input from a retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) inhibited North Atlantic deep water (NADW) formation, weakened the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), and triggered several cold periods in the North Atlantic region during the last deglaciation (21-8ka yrs BP). Since the establishment of this hypothesis more than thirty years ago, geomorphic and chronologic evidence of meltwater flows from the LIS have been shown to roughly coincide with centennial-to-millennial scale cool periods (e.g., Younger Dryas, the 8.2 ka event).

            Here, we use realizations of the MITgcm ocean model to investigate the possibility that meltwater discharge from the Hudson River, New York City, USA ~13,300 yrs BP triggered the Inter-Allerød Cold Period (IACP). Using estimates of flood volumes, we assess the sensitivity of AMOC to both short duration (1 month), and long duration (1 year) flood events. We also evaluate the impact of successive flood events on AMOC to determine if sequential floods impact AMOC differently than a single flood event. Finally, we also assess whether the continuous background flux of meltwater from the paleo-Hudson River played role in ‘pre-conditioning’ the AMOC to weaken in response to short duration outburst floods.

We find that in all of our experiments, regardless of flood magnitude, duration, reoccurrence interval (frequency) or background meltwater flux, there is no significant weakening of the AMOC. This limited impact suggests that although the Hudson Valley floods occurred near the beginning of the IACP, they are unlikely the sole driver. Additional modeling experiments are needed to determine if the combination of multiple drainage pathways from the LIS could have been a trigger and/or contributor to the IACP.

Our results have significant implications for determining whether other isolated deglacial flood events triggered periods of climatic cooling: for example, the millennial-length Younger Dryas cooling is thought to have been triggered by a flood only 3-times larger than the one from the Hudson River, which again questions the role short-lived outburst floods played in triggering centennial to millennial scale climate cooling.

How to cite: Pendleton, S., Condron, A., and Donnelly, J.: Hudson valley floods an unlikely trigger for Inter-Allerød Cold Period (IACP) cooling 13,300 years ago, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12829, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12829, 2021.

EGU21-8145 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Antarctic warmth in the last interglacial driven by Northern insolation and deglaciation

Takashi Obase, Ayako Abe-Ouchi, and Fuyuki Saito

The global mean sea level in the last interglacial (LIG, about 130,000 to 115,000 years before present) was very likely higher than the present level, driven mainly by mass loss of the Antarctic ice sheet. Some studies have suggested that this mass loss may have been caused by the warmer temperature over the Southern Ocean in the LIG compared with the present interglacial. However, the ultimate cause of the difference in Antarctic warming between the last and current interglacials has not been explained. Here, based on transient simulations of the last deglaciation using a fully coupled ocean–atmosphere model, we show that greater meltwater (by a factor of 1.5 relative to the last deglaciation) during the middle and later stages of the deglaciation could have produced the difference in Antarctic warmth. Northern Hemisphere ice sheet model experiments suggest that the difference in meltwater was caused by slightly smaller orbital eccentricity in our current interglacial than in the LIG, indicating that mass loss of the Antarctic ice sheet is influenced by the preceding northern summer insolation and disintegration of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets.

How to cite: Obase, T., Abe-Ouchi, A., and Saito, F.: Antarctic warmth in the last interglacial driven by Northern insolation and deglaciation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8145, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8145, 2021.

EGU21-6346 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Interaction of a Glacial Water Outflow with the Gulf Stream

Olivier Marchal and Alan Condron

A popular hypothesis in paleoclimatology posits that the episodic discharges of glacial water from the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) to the North Atlantic caused abrupt changes in ocean circulation and climate during the last (de)glacial periods. Implicit in this hypothesis is that the glacial water spread away from the coast and reached critical sites of deep water formation. Among the processes that could favour the offshore export of glacial water released along the eastern North American coast is the entrainment with the Gulf Stream near Cape Hatteras, where the Stream is observed to detach from the coast in the modern climate, or at other locations between Cape Hatteras and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland.

Here we investigate the fate of glacial water released in the western North Atlantic from the Laurentian Channel, which geologic evidence suggests to have been the main route of ice discharge from the Québec-Labrador Ice Dome of the LIS. To this end, we conduct numerical experiments with an ocean circulation model with eddy-resolving resolution and configured to represent the region north of Bermuda and west of the Grand Banks. Experiments with different regional sea levels are performed which correspond to different estimates of global sea level since the Last Glacial Maximum. In each experiment, glacial water in liquid form is discharged from the Laurentian Channel, providing a paleoceanographic analogue of the dam-break problem. As expected from the action of the Coriolis force and from the properties of the glacial water inflow, the discharged water turns to the right of the Channel and then produces a narrow buoyant current that flows along the coast to the southwest towards Cape Hatteras. Our presentation will focus on the interaction of this current with the Gulf Stream, particularly with its meanders and rings, and on the role of this interaction both in the seaward export of glacial water and in the modification of the Stream itself.

How to cite: Marchal, O. and Condron, A.: Interaction of a Glacial Water Outflow with the Gulf Stream, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6346, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6346, 2021.

EGU21-10357 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Towards more physically constrained freshwater injection via eddy permitting simulations of the last glacial cycle

Ryan Love, Heather Andres, Alan Condron, Xu Zhang, Gerrit Lohmann, and Lev Tarasov

Freshwater, in the form of glacial runoff, is hypothesized to play a critical role in centennial to millennial scale climate variability, eg. the Younger Dryas and Dansgaard Oeschger events. Freshwater injection, or hosing, model experiments demonstrate that freshwater has the capability to generate abrupt climate transitions.  However, in an attempt to mitigate the inability of most models to resolve the smaller-scale features relevant to freshwater transport (such as boundary currents and mesoscale eddies), these hosing experiments commonly apply the entirety of the freshwater directly to the regions of deepwater formation (DWF). Our results indicate that this can inflate the freshwater signal in those regions by as much as four times. We propose a novel method of freshwater injection for such low-resolution models that spatially distributes the freshwater in accord with the results of eddy-permitting modelling. Furthermore, this “freshwater fingerprint” method not only impacts the timing of simulated climate transitions but also can allow us to evaluate how much we are overestimating the effects of freshwater when injected directly into sites of DWF.

 

The freshwater fingerprints we develop are based on a suite of freshwater injection experiments performed using an eddy permitting Younger Dryas configuration of the MITGCM. Freshwater injection locations include the Mackenzie River, Gulf of St. Lawrence, Gulf of Mexico and a location off the coast of Norway, with flux amounts bounded by glacial reconstructions. These simulations indicate that freshwater from the Mackenzie River and Fennoscandia have the largest impact on salinity in most of the conventional sites of DWF (GIN and Labrador Seas, and in these simulations, predominantly the northern North Atlantic due to extensive sea ice), while freshwater from the Gulf of St. Lawrence is effective at freshening only the northern North Atlantic. The Gulf of Mexico has little impact on any DWF region we consider, mostly because the lower but continual flux in our simulations does not allow freshwater to penetrate northward past the Gulf Stream. The dilution of the freshwater signal as it is transported from the site of injection to the DWF zones leads to a reduction in the effective freshwater forcing, making hosing directly over DWF zones even with realistic freshwater amounts unrealistic. Thus, we construct freshwater fingerprints from these simulations by extracting the freshwater anomaly spatial pattern averaged over the last 5 simulation years, vertically integrating the field and normalizing it.


The freshwater fingerprint is then implemented in the COSMOS Earth Systems Model, which is run at resolutions typical for paleoclimate simulations (non-eddy permitting). Initial results show that freshwater from the Mackenzie River using our  fingerprint method leads to a more gradual cooling than if the meltwater is released directly over the hosing region (50-70N). We conclude that hosing over DWF zones, even with realistic freshwater amounts, produces an unrealistically large climate response. Additional results for the remaining injection locations and with the fingerprint implemented in a simpler climate model will be presented.

How to cite: Love, R., Andres, H., Condron, A., Zhang, X., Lohmann, G., and Tarasov, L.: Towards more physically constrained freshwater injection via eddy permitting simulations of the last glacial cycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10357, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10357, 2021.

EGU21-3073 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Variations of ocean biogeochemistry in a transient deglacial simulation with MPI-ESM

Bo Liu, Katharina D. Six, Tatiana Ilyina, and Thomas Extier

Variations in ocean-atmosphere carbon exchange, in response to varying physical and biogeochemical ocean states, is one of the major causes of the glacial-interglacial atmospheric CO2 changes. Most of the existing modelling studies use time-slice simulations with Earth System Models to quantify the proposed mechanisms, such as the impact of a weakened Southern Ocean westerlies and a massive discharge of freshwater from ice sheet melting on the deglacial atmospheric CO2 rise. We present the variations of ocean biogeochemistry in a transient deglaciation (21 – 10 kB.P.) simulation using the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model. We force the model with reconstructions of atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations, orbital parameters, ice sheet and dust deposition. In line with the physical ocean component, we account for the automatic adjustment of all marine biogeochemical tracers in response to changing bathymetry and coastlines that relate to deglacial melt water discharge and isostatic adjustment. We include a new representation of the stable carbon isotope (13C) in the ocean biogeochemical component to evaluate the simulation against δ13C records from sediment cores.

The model reproduces several proposed oceanic CO2 outgassing mechanisms. First, the net primary production (NPP) in the North Atlantic Ocean dramatically decrease (by 40 – 80%) during the first melt water pulse (15 – 14 kB.P.) which is caused by the weakening in the strength of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation from 21 to 3 Sv. However, globally the oceanic NPP only slightly decreases by 8% as oceanic NPP in the South Hemisphere increases during the same period. Second, during the melt water pulse in the Southern Ocean the ventilation of intermediate waters, which has high DIC content and low alkalinity concentration, is slightly enhanced. Third, the surface alkalinity decreases due to dilution and due to episodic shifts between CaCO3 production and opal production by phytoplankton. Lastly, CO2 solubility decreases with increasing deglacial sea surface temperature. The increase of surface pCO2 caused by the above mechanisms is, however, smaller than that of the prescribed atmospheric CO2. Thus, the ocean is a weak carbon sink in this deglacial simulation.

How to cite: Liu, B., Six, K. D., Ilyina, T., and Extier, T.: Variations of ocean biogeochemistry in a transient deglacial simulation with MPI-ESM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3073, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3073, 2021.

EGU21-6230 | vPICO presentations | CL1.2

Impact of land-sea organic matter fluxes on the ocean biogeochemistry during the Last Deglaciation

Thomas Extier, Katharina Six, Bo Liu, and Tatiana Ilyina

The Last Deglaciation (21-10 ka) is the most recent transition from a glacial to interglacial state. It is characterized by a pronounced sea level change of 95 m resulting in flooding of land areas and changes of coastlines. This period is also marked by several millennial events like the Heinrich Event 1 with diverse effects on sea level, oceanic circulation, climate and carbon cycle. In case of flooding of land surfaces during periods of sea level rise, carbon and nutrients stored in terrestrial organic matter in vegetation and soils are transferred to the ocean, potentially impacting the global ocean biogeochemical cycle and the uptake/release of CO2 once being remineralized. Changes in the ocean biogeochemical cycles are also indirectly related to the poorly constrained stoichiometry and remineralization time-scales of terrestrial organic matter, which both differ from the well-known parameters for marine organic matter.

We present here the first coupled transient simulation over the Last Deglaciation using the global ocean biogeochemical model HAMOCC (HAMburg Ocean Carbon Cycle) as part of the paleo-version of the MPI-ESM (Max Planck Institute Earth System Model) to study the impact of terrestrial organic matter input on the ocean biogeochemical cycle and oceanic CO2 fluxes during large sea level variations. This model version combines (1) a fully interactive adaptation of the ocean bathymetry with corresponding changes of the land-sea distribution, (2) a transient river routing and (3) the land-sea terrestrial organic matter transfer after flooding. Our simulation provides new insights on the land carbon inputs to the ocean carbon inventory (water column and sediment) due to flooding, with 170 GtC between 21-10 ka, of which 21.1 GtC and 36.8 GtC are within two 1000 years large freshwater discharge events (between 15-14 ka and 12-11 ka). These inputs of carbon rich material to the ocean during flooding events have however only a local effect on ocean CO2 outgassing, the global ocean remaining a sink of CO2. To infer the response of CO2 fluxes in this context, sensitivity experiments can be performed during the type of Heinrich event (15-14 ka) to evaluate and better constrain the terrestrial organic matter remineralization parameters.

How to cite: Extier, T., Six, K., Liu, B., and Ilyina, T.: Impact of land-sea organic matter fluxes on the ocean biogeochemistry during the Last Deglaciation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6230, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6230, 2021.

CL1.6 – Diagnosing causes and effects of abrupt climate, ecosystem and landscape change from the INTegration of Ice core MArine and TErrestrial records (INTIMATE)

EGU21-557 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Dual archive paleotemperature records over two pre-LGM stadial/interstadials in East Central Europe

Gabor Ujvari, Stefano M Bernasconi, Thomas Stevens, Sandor Kele, Barna Pall-Gergely, Gergely Suranyi, and Attila Demeny

The generally cold climate of the last glacial period was interrupted by numerous abrupt shifts to warmer interstadial conditions in the North Atlantic. The effects of this Dansgaard–Oeschger (D–O) type climatic variability have been found in a number of European and Asian terrestrial paleoclimate archives, including speleothems, lakes and loess deposits. However, only very few of the already sparse precisely dated records provide quantitative information on stadial-interstadial temperature variations over this time period. This is a major impediment to resolving the cause and geographical propagation of D-O events, as well as to understanding the impact they have on continental climates and environments.

Here we present carbonate clumped isotope (Δ47)-based active season paleotemperature (AST) estimates from land snails recovered from Greenland Stadial/Interstadial (GS/GI) 5 and 3 age loess at the Dunaszekcső loess site (Hungary), based on a uniquely detailed AMS 14C age dataset, alongside a new flowstone (PK-6, Bükkösd, Hungary) stable isotope-based temperature change record 230Th-dated to 30-26 ka. Stadial ASTs of the investigated periods were found to be in the range of 7–13 °C, corresponding to Tannual of 0–6 °C and TJuly of 11–17 °C, agreeing well with the range of model simulation results for the region. Interstadial AST values reconstructed for GI-5.1 and 3 (16–18 °C) indicate warm summers (TJuly: 20–22 °C) and relatively high annual mean temperatures (Tannual: 9–11 °C), matching present-day values. The PK-6 flowstone δ18Ocalcite-based temperature change estimates (~0.2 ‰ °C–1 δ18O/T gradient) reveal a 7–10 °C Tannual rise for the warmest phases of GI-3 and 4 compared to stadial temperatures, in very good agreement with the land snail 47 values.

Our results show that stadial-interstadial climate variability in East Central Europe was of comparable magnitude to that in Greenland. We propose that large scale ocean-atmospheric variability (NAO-AMO) imparts a major control on transmitting abrupt North Atlantic climate event signals into continental Europe during the last glacial.

 

This study was funded by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office to GÚ (OTKA PD-108639) and SK (OTKA KH-125584). TS is grateful for the support of the Swedish Research Council (2017-03888).

How to cite: Ujvari, G., Bernasconi, S. M., Stevens, T., Kele, S., Pall-Gergely, B., Suranyi, G., and Demeny, A.: Dual archive paleotemperature records over two pre-LGM stadial/interstadials in East Central Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-557, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-557, 2021.

EGU21-946 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Insights on the timing, global sulfate lifecycle and climate impact of Earth’s largest (pre-) historic volcanic eruptions

Michael Sigl, Florian Adolphi, Andrea Burke, Jihong Cole-Dai, Hubertus Fischer, Woon Mi Kim, Kirstin Krüger, Stefan Lorenz, Joseph McConnell, Kurt Nicolussi, Ulrike Niemeier, Charlotte Pearson, Frederick Reinig, Matthew Salzer, Mirko Severi, Claudia Timmreck, and Matthew Toohey

Extratropical volcanic eruptions are commonly thought to be less effective at driving large-scale surface cooling than tropical eruptions, and only the latter are commonly thought to be able to distribute sulfate globally. Here, we test both of these assumptions using a network of ice cores from the polar regions of Antarctica and Greenland covering the past 15’000 years and climate-aerosol modeling. We employ state-of-the-art analyses of trace elements, cryptoptephra and sulphur isotopes (Burke et al., 2019) to gain new insights into the timing of past eruptions, their stratospheric sulphur mass injections and subsequent sulphate aerosol lifecycle. We use this information to estimate the climate impact potential due to negative radiative forcing caused by Earth’s largest volcanic eruptions since the last Glacial. Our analysis encompasses over 1’000 eruptions and include the caldera-forming eruptions of Okmok II (Alaska, 43 BCE, VEI=6, 53°N; McConnell et al., 2020), Aniakchak II (Alaska, 1600s BCE, VEI=6, 57°N), Crater Lake (Mazama, Oregon, 5600s BCE, VEI=7, 43°N) and Laacher See (Germany, c. 13 ka BP, VEI=6, 50°N).

We use our reconstructed radiative forcing and the coupled earth system models MPI-ESM1.2 and CESM (version 1.2.2) to analyze the climatic impact caused by these eruptions and compare the simulated temperature response with temperature reconstructions based on ultra-long tree-ring chronologies. Finally, based on these comparisons, we propose a number of stratigraphic age tie-points to anchor ice-core chronologies from Greenland (GICC05) and Antarctica (WD2014) to the absolute dated tree-ring chronology. We thereby aim to improve proxy synchronization throughout the Holocene -- a prerequisite for detection and attribution studies -- and invite the paleo-climate community to update climate proxy records based on ice cores to the latest chronologies.    

The European Research Council Grant 820047 under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program funded the research project THERA - Timing of Holocene Volcanic eruptions and their radiative aerosol forcing. 

 

References:

Burke, A., Moore, K. A., Sigl, M., Nita, D. C., McConnell, J. R., and Adkins, J. F.: Stratospheric eruptions from tropical and extra-tropical volcanoes constrained using high-resolution sulfur isotopes in ice cores, Earth Planet Sc Lett, 521, 113-119, 2019.

McConnell, J. R., Sigl, M., Plunkett, G., Burke, A., Kim, W., Raible, C. C., Wilson, A. I., Manning, J. G., Ludlow, F. M., Chellman, N. J., Innes, H. M., Yang, Z., Larsen, J. F., Schaefer, J. R., Kipfstuhl, S., Mojtabavi, S., Wilhelms, F., Opel, T., Meyer, H., and Steffensen, J. P.: Extreme climate after massive eruption of Alaska’s Okmok volcano in 43 BCE and effects on the late Roman Republic and Ptolemaic Kingdom, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 15443-15449, 2020.

How to cite: Sigl, M., Adolphi, F., Burke, A., Cole-Dai, J., Fischer, H., Kim, W. M., Krüger, K., Lorenz, S., McConnell, J., Nicolussi, K., Niemeier, U., Pearson, C., Reinig, F., Salzer, M., Severi, M., Timmreck, C., and Toohey, M.: Insights on the timing, global sulfate lifecycle and climate impact of Earth’s largest (pre-) historic volcanic eruptions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-946, 2021.

EGU21-3391 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Nile floods during the last African Humid Period: a seasonal record from the deep-sea fan

Cecile Blanchet, Arne Ramisch, Rik Tjallingii, and Achim Brauer

Seasonal floods are life-supporting events in the Nile Valley and have been crucial to the development of complex societies. Present populations depend on their occurrence but the alteration of fluvial dynamics under climate change remains elusive. In order to better understand how fluvial dynamics respond to climatic changes, we explore past flood dynamics of the Nile River using a unique finely laminated sequence from the Nile deep-sea fan.

Today, floods occur during the summer, when monsoonal rainfall hits the Ethiopian highlands and feeds the Blue Nile. Core P362/2-33 covers the past 9.5 ka BP and is ideally located to record changes in fluvial dynamics during periods of stronger monsoon activity such as the Saharan Humid Periods. The absence of oxygen in the Mediterranean bottom waters during the last Saharan Humid Period (during sapropel S1 deposition) allowed to preserve the laminated structure between 9.5 and 7.5 ka BP.

We focus here on examining the nature of the laminations in order to 1) understand the deposition mechanism and 2) obtain a reconstruction of past fluvial dynamics at seasonal resolution.

Microfacies analysis and elemental micro-XRF scanning indicate that couplets of alternating dark- and light-coloured layers represent seasonal deposits of Nile discharge and marine hemipelagic sedimentation, respectively. Preliminary lamination counts suggest that couplets were deposited at an annual rate for most of the record. Increases in layer thickness is observed around 9.5 and 9.1 ka BP, followed by a gradual decrease until 8 ka. Careful examination of lamination structure and time-series analysis of layer counts will permit to further explore sub-annual changes in flood dynamics during the Saharan Humid Period. Finally, due to its high temporal resolution, our record has the potential to link reconstructions of Nile discharge to other regional archives of hydrological changes (e.g., speleothems, lakes) and thereby identify overarching forcing mechanisms.

How to cite: Blanchet, C., Ramisch, A., Tjallingii, R., and Brauer, A.: Nile floods during the last African Humid Period: a seasonal record from the deep-sea fan, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3391, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3391, 2021.

EGU21-13021 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Rapid environmental changes of the Late-glacial and Holocene in a sediment record from the Yagour Plateau, High Atlas, Morocco

Henk Cornelissen, William Fletcher, Philip Hughes, Benjamin Bell, Ali Rhoujjati, Abdelhadi Ewague, and David Fink

The High Atlas mountains of Morocco represent a climatological frontier between the Atlantic and Saharan realms as well as a site of major Pleistocene glacier expansion. However, Late-glacial and Holocene environmental change is weakly constrained, leaving open questions about the influence of high- and low-latitude climate forcing and the expression of North Atlantic rapid climate changes. High elevation lakes on the sandstone plateaux of the High Atlas have been recognised as archives of Late Quaternary environmental change but remain little explored. Here, we present findings from new sedimentological, palaeoecological and geochronological investigation of a lake marginal sediment core recovered in June 2019 from the Ifard Lake located on the Yagour Plateau. The plateau is a distinctive sandstone upland located to the southeast of Marrakech in the High Atlas (31.31°N, 7.60°W, 2460 m.a.s.l.). The lake is located within a small, perched catchment area, offering an opportunity to isolate catchment effects and investigate atmospheric deposition of organic and inorganic tracers of past environmental change. The core stratigraphy reveals shifts between inorganic sands and lake muds with fluctuations in grain sizes and sediment reddening. The differences in these stratigraphic layers are most likely linked to hydrological changes associated with changing snowpack conditions and local catchment erosion dynamics. The core chronology is well-constrained by AMS radiocarbon dating of pollen concentrates, with the core sequence spanning the last ca. 14,000 years. The driving agents of environmental change on the plateau are inferred using a multiproxy approach, combining sedimentological analyses (particle-size by laser granulometry, elemental analysis by core-scanning XRF, C/H/N/S analysis), palynology (pollen, spores, non-pollen palynomorphs) and contiguous macrocharcoal analysis. High-resolution, well-constrained proxies therefore permit novel regional insights into past environmental and climatic changes at centennial timescales. A prime working hypothesis is that the imprint of wider palaeoclimatic changes of both the North Atlantic region and Saharan realm (African Humid Period, AHP) is detected at this site. Key climatic periods such as the Younger Dryas and multi-centennial cooling episodes around 8000 and 4200 years ago are distinctly characterised in the record by finer grain sizes and the accumulation of pollen-rich material and charcoal. These responses are thought to be governed by regional climate forcing and local snowmelt moisture supply to the Yagour Plateau. An increase in fine sediment supply, magnetic susceptibility and Fe content in the upper part of the core may be related to enhanced atmospheric dust deposition following the end of the AHP. Whilst taking anthropological influences on the local environment into account, this study will contribute to the detection of long-term and rapid climate changes in a sensitive mountain region at the rim of the Atlantic and Saharan climate systems.

How to cite: Cornelissen, H., Fletcher, W., Hughes, P., Bell, B., Rhoujjati, A., Ewague, A., and Fink, D.: Rapid environmental changes of the Late-glacial and Holocene in a sediment record from the Yagour Plateau, High Atlas, Morocco, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13021, 2021.

EGU21-13482 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Late Pleistocene paleo-hydrological reconstruction based on a new lake-level curve of the Dead Sea

Jürgen Mey, Juluis Jara, and Manfred R. Strecker

The Dead Sea depression features exceptionally well preserved lacustrine sedimentary sequences and fossil lake-level markers that attest to a much more extensive lake with a maximum highstand water level of more than 200 m above the modern Dead Sea. Lake-level reconstructions based on sedimentary sequences places this highstand phase within the interval of 15-29 ka. Regional paleoclimatic records, however, indicate arid conditions during this time. This apparent contradiction has been explained by spatially heterogeneous moisture delivery resulting from a southward shift of the Westerly wind system and a change in the path and intensity of winter storms. A newly established lake level-chronology based on 14C- and U/Th-dating of fossil stromatolites has provided contrasting results with respect to previous investigations. Accordingly, the paleolake-highstand was of much shorter duration and occurred at least 10 ka earlier than previously suggested. The new lake-level curve agrees with evidence of arid glacial and humid interglacial periods in the Levant.  In this study we compared these different lake-level reconstructions quantitatively, using a distributed hydrological balance model. This model computes evaporation based on an aerodynamic- /mass-transfer approach. Calibration and validation of this model is achieved by using ~30 years of pre-anthropogenic lake-level observations combined with interpolated climate surfaces based on weather-station records. In the paleo-hydrological reconstruction we account for parameter uncertainties using Monte-Carlo simulations. Our preliminary results show a pronounced sensitivity of the lake-level to precipitation, wind speed, and surface roughness.

How to cite: Mey, J., Jara, J., and Strecker, M. R.: Late Pleistocene paleo-hydrological reconstruction based on a new lake-level curve of the Dead Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13482, 2021.

EGU21-13747 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

A 10Be-dated record of glacial retreat in Connemara, Ireland, after the Last Glacial Maximum and implications for North Atlantic climate

Adrienne Foreman, Gordon Bromley, Brenda Hall, and Margaret Jackson

Late Pleistocene stadials were global events, associated with weakened Asian monsoons and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), shifts in atmospheric boundaries and precipitation belts, and warming of the Southern Hemisphere and tropics. In the Northern Hemisphere, stadials are traditionally viewed as dramatic cooling events centred on the North Atlantic, with their abrupt onset attributed to meltwater-induced suppression of the AMOC due to melting of large Northern Hemisphere ice sheets. As warmer temperatures are required for sustained meltwater input, however, there is an apparent inconsistency with this model of Northern Hemisphere stadial cooling. To investigate this inconsistency, we reconstructed the timing and nature of glacial fluctuations in Connemara, western Ireland, located within the in the North Atlantic basin, during Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1). Fifteen internally consistent cosmogenic beryllium-10 ages of erratic boulders indicate rapid and widespread deglaciation of the former Connemara ice centre at ~17.5 ka. The apparent abruptness of ice retreat, coupled with stratigraphic correlation with geomorphic features indicative of meltwater, suggest that HS1 deglaciation was driven by enhanced melting during the summer ablation season. This interpretation supports evidence for enhanced meltwater discharge and summertime warming elsewhere in Europe during HS1 but may conflict with the traditional view of stadials as severe cooling events.

How to cite: Foreman, A., Bromley, G., Hall, B., and Jackson, M.: A 10Be-dated record of glacial retreat in Connemara, Ireland, after the Last Glacial Maximum and implications for North Atlantic climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13747, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13747, 2021.

EGU21-15568 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

A chironomid-based reconstruction of late glacial summer temperatures in the Pareng Mountains (Romania)

Zoltán Szabó, Oliver Heiri, Gabriella Darabos, Ivett Pálfi, Mihály Molnár, János L. Korponai, and Enikő K. Magyari

Late Glacial and Early Holocene summer temperatures were reconstructed based on fossil chironomid assemblages at Lake Latorica (Lacul Iezerul Latoritei; Pareng Mountains, 1530 m a.s.l.) with a joint Norwegian – Swiss transfer function, providing an important addition to the late glacial quantitative climate reconstructions from eastern-central Europe. The reconstructed pattern of the Late Glacial faunal and chironomid-inferred temperature changes in Lake Latorica shows some differences from the NGRIP δ18O record and other European chironomid-based reconstructions; however, it is consistent with the chironomid results of Lake Brazi from the neighbouring Retyezat Mountains (1740 m a.s.l.). Our reconstruction shows that the summer air temperature at Lake Latorica increased by ~ 3°C at the Oldest Dryas/Bølling transition (GS-2/GI-1) and reached 8.1-10.8°C during the Late Glacial interstadial. The Younger Dryas (GS-1) climate reversal in the chironomid-based temperature reconstruction is shown by only a weak decrease (~1°C), while slow temperature increase (9.7–11°C) is observed in the second half of the period. At the Holocene transition temperature increase of nearly 2°C was observed in the reconstruction. Before the Preboreal Oscillation (PO) the mean summer air temperature in the Early Holocene was 12.5°C. During PO the temperature reconstruction shows a decrease of 1.8°C. This cold event coincides with cooling in the Greenland ice core records and other European temperature reconstructions. After the Preboral oscillation the summer air temperatures increase to ~12.8°C in the Early Holocene.

How to cite: Szabó, Z., Heiri, O., Darabos, G., Pálfi, I., Molnár, M., Korponai, J. L., and Magyari, E. K.: A chironomid-based reconstruction of late glacial summer temperatures in the Pareng Mountains (Romania), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15568, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15568, 2021.

EGU21-15576 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

The spatiotemporal pattern of the Bond 4 event (5.2 ka) : a global data-based review

Bassem Jalali and Marie-Alexandrine Sicre

The Bond 4 event starting at 7000 yr BP and culminating around 5200 yr BP corresponds to the largest (in magnitude and duration) invasion of drifting ice across the subpolar North Atlantic during the Holocene (Bond et al., 2001). While several studies have focused on other events of the Holocene, such as the 8.2 ka, the 4.2 ka and the Little Ice Age, little is known about the mid-Holocene 5.2 ka event. Here we present a global compilation of carefully selected high-resolution time series of sea surface temperature (SST; N=58) and humidity/precipitation (N=35) to characterize in space and time the 5.2 ka event pattern.

The SST records show the occurrence of cold conditions in the North Atlantic, western Mediterranean as well as in the western Pacific Ocean. However, they indicate warming in the high latitude North Atlantic, the southeastern Atlantic, the eastern Mediterranean and the Arabian and Red seas. Humidity/precipitation data (mainly based on oxygen  isotope records in speleothems) indicate dry conditions in the northern hemisphere subtropical and mid latitude regions of all continents. Based on these data and others from marine and lacustrine records in tropical regions, we suggest a possible weakening of monsoon systems, i.e. in Africa, North America, southwest Asia as well as East Asia. Precipitation reduced as well in most regions of the Mediterranean (i.e. except Iberian Peninsula). All together these data indicate severe climate conditions during the 5.2 ka event.

Based on the recent compilation of sortable silt from the high latitude North Atlantic of McCave and Andrews (2019), the 5.2 ka event coincides with a decrease of the main Shallow and bottom ocean flows (i.e. North Iceland Irminger Current, East Greenland Current, Iceland-Scotland overflow) probably reflecting a weakening of the North Atlantic Deep Water formation. This event also corresponds to the occurrence of several solar minima as well as several tropical volcanic mega-eruptions that could have triggered a global colder and drier climate (Steinhilber et al., 2012; Kobashi et al., 2017). 

How to cite: Jalali, B. and Sicre, M.-A.: The spatiotemporal pattern of the Bond 4 event (5.2 ka) : a global data-based review, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15576, 2021.

EGU21-15654 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Geochemical survey of Lake Balaton sediments: holocene paleoenvironment and paleoclimate

Ivett Pálfi, Mihály Pósfai, Ferenc Kristály, Daniel Veres, Fabien Arnaud, Zoltán Szalai, Fruzsina Gresina, Zoltán Szabó, Gabriella Darabos, János Korponai, György Czuppon, Attila Demény, and Enikő Magyari

In the winter of 2017 three undisturbed sediment cores were retrieved from the Szemes Basin of Lake Balaton. The sediments were sampled for AMS 14C dating and we used 8 of the radiocarbon dates for age-depth modelling. Based on this, the investigated sediment sequence covers the entire Holocene and Late Glacial period and the bottom of the sediment is ca. ~16,000 cal yr BP old. X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) was used to reconstruct rapid changes in the element content of the lake sediment. The evaluation of the measured results makes it possible to reconstruct the changes in the discharge environment and lake water level that can be related to the climate and human impact. Based on the data, two major evaporation events can be observed at 5500 BP and 8100 BP. These results were also verified by oxygen isotope studies. To reconstruct the energy of the deposition environment, particle size analysis was performed. The obtained results confirmed that river sediments are common at the bottom of Lake Balaton sediments, while biogenic carbonate dominates in the upper, Holocene part of the sediment core. To identify each mineral phase in the sediment, X-ray diffraction (XRD) studies were used to determine the ratio of calcite to Mg-calcite. Based on our XRF measurements, focusing primarily on quantitative changes in magnesium and calcium, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) studies were performed, mainly in the Mg enrichment layer around 8100 BP. The precipitation of biogenic carbonate in Lake Balaton is still taking place, mainly in the form of calcite and Mg-calcite. Their relative proportions strongly depend on the Mg saturation of the water and the substrates on which they are separated. From our results we can draw conclusions about the possible previous deeper phases of the lake and the evaporation conditions of the water. The data obtained from transmission electron microscopy shows a good agreement with the results of the XRF measurement, the proportion of Mg-calcite increases around 8100 BP that likely indicate drier climatic conditions connectable to the well know 8.2 ka cal BP climatic reversal.

How to cite: Pálfi, I., Pósfai, M., Kristály, F., Veres, D., Arnaud, F., Szalai, Z., Gresina, F., Szabó, Z., Darabos, G., Korponai, J., Czuppon, G., Demény, A., and Magyari, E.: Geochemical survey of Lake Balaton sediments: holocene paleoenvironment and paleoclimate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15654, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15654, 2021.

EGU21-16242 | vPICO presentations | CL1.6

Late Glacial and Holocene multi-proxy paleoecology in the Southern Carpathian Mountains: quantitative reconstructions and promising new molecular research directions

Enikő Magyari, János Korponai, Mónika Tóth, Mihály Braun, Katalin Hubay, Zoltán Szabó, Gabriella Darabos, Ivett Pálfi, Miklós Bálint, Zsuzsanna Pató, Daniel Veres, and Krisztina Buczkó

Over the last 10 years several alpine lakes were studied from the Southern Carpathian Mountains (SCM) using paleoecological, geochemical and stable isotope techniques. The aim of these studies were to obtain quantitative climate reconstructions for the alpine region for the Late Glacial (LG) and Holocene, reconstruct tree and timberline changes and examine how rapid climate change events manifested in this region, what are the regions characteristics. Absolute chronologies were also supported here for the first time with tephra chronology in the Early Holocene. In addition, environmental DNA studies were used to explore what molecular techniques can add to a more exact and often species level reconstruction of past floristic compositions. This talk will summarize these researches and use multivariate statistics to examine leads and lags in ecosystem response at multiple sites (Retezat, Pareng, Fogaras, Ciomadul Mts). These analyses first of all demonstrate that the amplitude of warming was attenuated in the SCM at the GS-2/GI-1 transition relative to NW Europe (~2,8-3 oC), summer temperatures increased abruptly already at 16.2 ka cal BP in direct response to the weakening polar circulation and the tripartite GS-1 had weak summer temperature decrease (<1 oC), but winter cooling was strong. Regarding the order of ecosystem changes, lead and lag analysis revealed <50 yr lag in vegetation response, 0-100 lag in aquatic floristic response and ~100-150 yr lag in aquatic faunal response to external forcing. Environmental DNA studies showed that despite the method is capable to better capture grass (Poaceae) floristic diversity and replicates woody specie composition obtained by plant macrofossil data, it fails to provide higher resolution for the herbaceous flora around the studied lakes that feature was explained partly by the incompleteness of reference DNA sequences for the trnL region and the DNA preservation characteristics of alpine lakes. Using these pioneer studies, several promising research directions were identified for this region: modelling of projected tree and timberline changes in combination with reconstructed data, using eDNA techniques to decipher alpine farming histories in the mountains and its impact on late Holocene tree and timberline change, reconstruction the accelerating speed of ecosystem change over the last 100 yr. in alpine lakes and calling attention for the irreversibility of these changes, demonstrating tipping points. These will be discussed in the presentation.

How to cite: Magyari, E., Korponai, J., Tóth, M., Braun, M., Hubay, K., Szabó, Z., Darabos, G., Pálfi, I., Bálint, M., Pató, Z., Veres, D., and Buczkó, K.: Late Glacial and Holocene multi-proxy paleoecology in the Southern Carpathian Mountains: quantitative reconstructions and promising new molecular research directions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16242, 2021.

CL1.7 – The state-of-the-art in ice coring sciences (StatICS)

EGU21-1020 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Preliminary results for stratigraphy and chronology of blue ice in Larsen Glacier, East Antarctica

Giyoon Lee, Jinho Ahn, Hyeontae Ju, Florian Ritterbusch, Ikumi Oyabu, Songyi Kim, Kenji Kawamura, Zheng-Tian Lu, Sangyoung Han, Sambit Ghosh, Yeongcheol Han, Sangbum Hong, Changhee Han, Soon Do Hur, Wei Jiang, and Guomin Yang

Among the paleoclimate archives, we may take advantage of ice cores to directly measure greenhouse compositions of ancient air. Nevertheless, ice cores from deep drilling projects recover limited amount of ice for a given time period and hence limiting the studies that need an extensive amount of ice such as trace gas isotopes. In contrast, blue ice areas (BIAs) may provide a large amount of ancient ice outcropped at the surface. However, ice flow makes the blue ice stratigraphy complicated in many areas, and accordingly makes it difficult to reconstruct a continuous stratigraphy. Recently, the oldest ice was discovered at Allan Hills BIA (about 2.7 Ma). However, the stratigraphy is not continuous for the older part. Here we show preliminary results from Larsen Glacier, East Antarctica. The Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) results show parallel ice layers near the surface with dips of 1-5° and indicate that the ice thickness ranges of 200–400 m. δDice of a vertical core sample matches well with that in the horizontally spaced surface ice samples. Greenhouse gas concentrations are significantly altered at shallow depths of < ~4.5 m. The δ18Oatm, CH4 concentration and stable isotopes of ice (δ18Oice, δDice) indicate that the Larsen BIA cover the Last Glacial Termination at the studied sites. 81Kr ages, corrected by 85Kr for the modern air contamination, are less than 54 ka, supporting the ages constrained by the other chemistry data.

How to cite: Lee, G., Ahn, J., Ju, H., Ritterbusch, F., Oyabu, I., Kim, S., Kawamura, K., Lu, Z.-T., Han, S., Ghosh, S., Han, Y., Hong, S., Han, C., Hur, S. D., Jiang, W., and Yang, G.: Preliminary results for stratigraphy and chronology of blue ice in Larsen Glacier, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1020, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1020, 2021.

EGU21-2191 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Using ground-penetrating radar to determine the representativeness of ice core surface mass balance records at ice rises along the Princess Ragnhild Coast, East Antarctica

Marie G. P. Cavitte, Hugues Goosse, Sarah Wauthy, Jean-Louis Tison, Thore Kausch, Sainan Sun, Brice Van Liefferinge, Mana Inoue, Quentin Dalaiden, Jan T.M. Lenaerts, Stef Lhermitte, and Frank Pattyn

Several studies have shown that there is often a poor match between surface mass balance (SMB, mass gain at the surface of the ice sheet) simulated by regional climate models and the one locally measured from ice cores in Antarctica. Models’ representation of the physical processes that affect SMB is known to be imperfect, while ice core records may be strongly influenced by local processes such as post-depositional wind redistribution and precipitation intermittency. These two sources of uncertainty likely both have a role to play in the discrepancy identified between modeled and observed ice core SMB estimates over the past centuries.

The goal here is to estimate the uncertainties associated with the difference between a point-wise measurement of SMB as provided by the ice core and the SMB averages over a grid of several square kilometers of the models. To do so, we use ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data, collected over several ice rises, located along the high accumulation Princess Ragnhild Coast (East Antarctica), to obtain a multi-year resolution record that goes back ∼30-40 years, representing SMB spatial and temporal variability at the scale of a few km2 for each ice rise. Ice cores were collected during each radar field campaign, which allows us to place age constraints on the radar stratigraphy obtained and compare the GPR SMB estimates with the ice core SMB estimate.

Therefore, we are able to calculate an error of representativeness for each ice core SMB, estimated as the difference between the average GPR SMB over a few km2 and the ice core SMB. This representativeness error can be split into two components: a systematic error (on the order of ∼0.1 m w.e. yr-1) and a random error (on the order of ±1 cm w.e. yr-1). Finally, we then compare our corrected ice core SMB records to regional SMB derived from a state-of-the-art polar-oriented regional climate model to quantify the impact of ice core uncertainties on the modeled-observed SMB discrepancy.

How to cite: Cavitte, M. G. P., Goosse, H., Wauthy, S., Tison, J.-L., Kausch, T., Sun, S., Van Liefferinge, B., Inoue, M., Dalaiden, Q., Lenaerts, J. T. M., Lhermitte, S., and Pattyn, F.: Using ground-penetrating radar to determine the representativeness of ice core surface mass balance records at ice rises along the Princess Ragnhild Coast, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2191, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2191, 2021.

EGU21-2225 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Atmospheric influences on water stable isotopes in Antarctic water vapor and surface snow – implications for ice core interpretation

Elisabeth Schlosser, Saeid Bagheri, Jordan G. Powers, Kevin W. Manning, Maria Hoerhold, Melanie Behrens, and Martin Werner

In Austral summer 2017/18 daily surface snow samples were taken (weather allowing) at two depths, 0-1cm and 6-7cm, at Neumayer III Station, Dronning Maud Land DML, Antarctica. Stable isotope ratios (18O, D, d-excess) of the snow samples were analysed in the AWI isotope lab. In parallel, water vapor stable isotopes were measured continuously on a routine base with a Picarro cavity ring-down spectroscope analyser (CRDS). Neumayer III is also a full meteorological observatory measuring all important meteorological variables including upper-air data. Meteorological data were directly compared to both snow and vapor isotope data. The corresponding synoptic situations were analysed using data from AMPS (Antarctic Mesoscale Prediction System), which employs WRF (Weather Research and Forecasting Model), a mesoscale atmospheric model that has been successfully used in earlier studies in DML. AMPS is run operationally at NCAR for Antarctic weather forecasting, particularly for flight operations of the US Antarctic Program (USAP). Additionally, back-trajectory calculations to investigate moisture sources and transport were carried out using FLEXPART, an open-source Lagrangian particle dispersion model. Due to logistical problems, the measuring period during the expedition was too short for statistical analysis, thus we focus on case studies here. In particular, periods with no precipitation were investigated, since earlier studies in Greenland have shown that the interaction of snow surface and atmosphere is important for the stable isotope ratio in the snow, thus in later ice cores that are used to derive paleo temperatures. A better understanding of the highly complex relationship between water vapor stable isotopes and meteorological conditions (including moisture source and transport) as well as the interaction between surface snow and water vapor is necessary for a correct paleoclimatic interpretation of ice cores.

How to cite: Schlosser, E., Bagheri, S., Powers, J. G., Manning, K. W., Hoerhold, M., Behrens, M., and Werner, M.: Atmospheric influences on water stable isotopes in Antarctic water vapor and surface snow – implications for ice core interpretation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2225, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2225, 2021.

EGU21-3624 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Constraining ice core chronologies with 39Ar and 81Kr

Florian Ritterbusch, Jinho Ahn, Ji-Qiang Gu, Wei Jiang, Giyoon Lee, Zheng-Tian Lu, Lili Shao, Lide Tian, A-min L. Tong, and Guo-Ming Yang

Paleoclimate reconstructions from ice core records can be hampered due to the lack of a reliable chronology, especially when the stratigraphy is disturbed and conventional dating methods cannot be readily applied. The noble-gas radioisotopes 81Kr and 39Ar can in these cases provide robust constraints as they yield absolute, radiometric ages. 81Kr (half-life 229 ka) covers the time span of 50-1300 ka, which is particularly relevant for polar ice cores, whereas 39Ar (half-life 269 a) with a dating range of 50-1800 a is suitable for high mountain glaciers. For a long time the use of 81Kr and 39Ar for dating of ice samples was hampered by the lack of a detection technique that can meet its extremely small abundance at a reasonable sample size.

Here, we present 81Kr and 39Ar dating of Antarctic and Tibetan ice cores with the detection method Atom Trap Trace Analysis (ATTA), using 5-10 kg of ice for 81Kr and 2-5 kg for 39Ar. Recent advances in further decreasing the sample size and increasing the dating precision will be discussed. Current studies include 81Kr dating in shallow ice cores from the Larsen Blue ice area, East Antarctica, in order to retrieve climate signals from the last glacial termination. Moreover, an 39Ar profile from a central Tibetan ice core has been obtained in combination with layer counting based on isotopic and visual stratigraphic signals. The presented studies demonstrate how 81Kr and 39Ar can constrain the age range of ice cores and complement other methods in developing an ice core chronology.

 

[1] Z.-T. Lu, Tracer applications of noble gas radionuclides in the geosciences, Earth-Science Reviews 138, 196-214, (2014)
[2] C. Buizert, Radiometric 81Kr dating identifies 120,000-year-old ice at Taylor Glacier, Antarctica, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111, 6876, (2014)

[3] L. Tian, 81Kr Dating at the Guliya Ice Cap, Tibetan Plateau, Geophysical Research Letters, (2019)

http://atta.ustc.edu.cn

How to cite: Ritterbusch, F., Ahn, J., Gu, J.-Q., Jiang, W., Lee, G., Lu, Z.-T., Shao, L., Tian, L., Tong, A.-L., and Yang, G.-M.: Constraining ice core chronologies with 39Ar and 81Kr, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3624, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3624, 2021.

EGU21-3791 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Upstream flow effects revealed in the EastGRIP ice-core using a Monte Carlo inversion of a 2D ice-flow model

Tamara Annina Gerber, Christine Hvidberg, Aslak Grinsted, Daniela Jansen, Steven Franke, Sune Olander Rasmussen, Giulia Sinnl, and Dorthe Dahl-Jensen

The North East Greenland ice-stream (NEGIS) is the largest active ice-stream on the Greenland ice-sheet and is a crucial contributor to the ice-sheet mass balance. To investigate the ice-stream dynamics and to gain information about the past climate, a deep ice-core is drilled in the upstream part of the NEGIS, termed the East Greenland ice-core project (EastGRIP). Upstream flow effects introduce non-climatic bias in ice-cores and are particularly strong at EastGRIP due to high ice-flow velocities and the location in an ice-stream on the eastern flank of the Greenland ice-sheet. Understanding and ultimately correcting for such effects requires information on the source area and the local atmospheric conditions at the time of ice deposition. We use a two-dimensional Dansgaard-Johnsen model to simulate ice-flow along three approximated flow-lines between the summit of the ice-sheet and EastGRIP. Model parameters are determined using a Monte Carlo inversion by minimizing the misfit between modeled isochrones and isochrones observed in radio-echo-sounding images. We calculate backward-in-time particle trajectories to determine the source area of ice found in the EastGRIP core today and present estimates of surface elevation and past accumulation-rates at the deposition site. The thinning function and accumulated strain obtained from the modeled velocity field provide useful information on the deformation history in the EastGRIP ice. Our results indicate that increased accumulation in the upstream area is predominantly responsible for the constant annual layer thickness observed in the upper part of the ice column at EastGRIP. Inverted model parameters suggest that the imprint of basal melting and sliding is present in large parts along the flow profiles and that most internal ice deformation happens close to the bedrock. The results of this study can act as a basis for applying upstream corrections to a variety of ice-core measurements, and the model parameters can be useful constraints for more sophisticated modeling approaches in the future. 

How to cite: Gerber, T. A., Hvidberg, C., Grinsted, A., Jansen, D., Franke, S., Rasmussen, S. O., Sinnl, G., and Dahl-Jensen, D.: Upstream flow effects revealed in the EastGRIP ice-core using a Monte Carlo inversion of a 2D ice-flow model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3791, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3791, 2021.

The storage of melted snow and/or ice samples from snow pits and ice cores in a refrigerator for long durations may be limited by an increase in particle concentration caused by microbial growth after approximately 1–2 weeks. In this study, we examined an ultraviolet (UV) disinfection method for the storage of melted snow and/or ice samples. Surface snow obtained from Glacier No. 31 in the Suntar-Khayata Range, eastern Siberia, Russia was divided into two portions for UV treatment and untreated controls. Particle concentrations in the samples were measured using a Coulter counter (Multisizer 4e; Beckman Coulter, USA). Whereas the particle concentration in untreated samples increased, no obvious increase was observed over 53 days in the samples subjected to UV treatment. In addition, the original particle concentrations were unaffected by UV treatment. These findings indicate that the antimicrobial effect of UV radiation is effective for long-term sample storage of melted water samples. A detailed analysis of the particle size distribution for untreated samples indicated that particles of 0.7–1.2 µm appeared within the first 7–14 days. Measurements using a viable particle counter (XL-10BT2 and XL-28A1; RION Co. Ltd., Japan) confirmed that these were biological particles, suggesting that microbial growth occurs during this period. Subsequently, the particles shifted to a smaller size and a higher concentration, suggesting that the decomposition of microorganisms occurred in the water samples. Therefore, the size distribution of particles in untreated samples reflected the growth and decomposition of microorganisms over time.

How to cite: Nakazawa, F. and Goto-Azuma, K.: Examination of ultraviolet germicidal radiation for inactivating microorganisms in melted snow and ice samples, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3949, 2021.

EGU21-4944 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Recent seasonal changes of metal composition and size distribution of mineral particles in snow at EGRIP, Greenland

Yuki Komuro, Fumio Nakazawa, Kumiko Goto-Azuma, Motohiro Hirabayashi, Wataru Shigeyama, and Naoko Nagatsuka

Seasonal changes of meteorological and ground surface conditions can cause seasonal changes of source area of mineral particles supplied to the Greenland ice sheet. Difference in metal composition and size distribution of them reflects their source area difference. To clarify seasonal changes in the source area of mineral particles, we examined the metal composition and size distribution of them in snow pit samples obtained from EGRIP (East Greenland Ice Core Project).

In summer 2017, we dug a 2.01 m snow pit at EGRIP camp. Snow samples were collected at 0.03 m intervals. The snow samples were melted, then fractions of them were analyzed for the particle size distribution (0.52-12μm) with a Coulter counter (Beckman Coulter: Multisizer 4). Other fractions of the samples were treated with a microwave acid digestion method to decompose particulates. Total concentrations of Al, Ca and Na in samples were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.

Total concentrations of Al (t-Al) and concentrations of non-sea-salt Ca (nssCa) showed peak values in winter to spring layers. In those layers, nssCa/t-Al ratios and volume fractions of fine particles (<4 μm) tended to be relatively high. In some of those layers, the nssCa/t-Al ratios were 2-3 times higher than the crustal average of Ca/Al ratio. This result suggests that fine Ca-rich mineral particles originated from remote desert areas were supplied to EGRIP in those seasons. In contrast, in summer to autumn layers, the nssCa/t-Al ratios and volume fractions tended to be relatively low. This result can be explained by supplies of coarse (≥ 4 μm) Ca-poor mineral particles originated from soil areas near Greenland in those seasons.

How to cite: Komuro, Y., Nakazawa, F., Goto-Azuma, K., Hirabayashi, M., Shigeyama, W., and Nagatsuka, N.: Recent seasonal changes of metal composition and size distribution of mineral particles in snow at EGRIP, Greenland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4944, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4944, 2021.

EGU21-5105 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Two-dimensional impurity imaging in polar ice cores sparks new demand for automated image analysis

Pascal Bohleber, Marco Roman, Sebastiano Vascon, Marcello Pelillo, and Carlo Barbante

Due to its micron-scale resolution and micro-destructiveness, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) is especially suited for the analysis of the oldest and highly thinned sections of polar ice cores. State-of-the-art 2D elemental imaging by LA-ICP-MS has great potential for investigating the location of impurities on the ice sample surface and is crucial to avoid misinterpretation of ultra-fine resolution signals. The impurity imaging with LA-ICP-MS comprises several millions of laser shots fired over just a few square mm. This technique combines new chemical images with visual analysis and, in so doing raises new questions that may be answered through techniques in automated image analysis and computer vision. As an illustration of this new frontier, a selected set of key problems is presented, with first examples of how automated image analysis techniques can help solving them. This concerns the relationship between impurity localization and the grain boundary network as well as the paleoclimate significance of single line profiles along the main core axis. Ultimately, this demonstrates that it is the right time to spark an intensified exchange among the two scientific communities of computer vision and ice core science.

How to cite: Bohleber, P., Roman, M., Vascon, S., Pelillo, M., and Barbante, C.: Two-dimensional impurity imaging in polar ice cores sparks new demand for automated image analysis, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5105, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5105, 2021.

EGU21-5504 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

WACSWAIN project: isotope and chemical ice core records from Skytrain Ice Rise, Antarctica

Mackenzie Grieman, Helene Hoffmann, Jack Humby, Robert Mulvaney, Christoph Nehrbass-Ahles, Isobel Rowell, Elizabeth Thomas, and Eric Wolff

The aim of the WArm Climate Stability of the West Antarctic ice sheet in the last INterglacial (WACSWAIN) project is to investigate the possible collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) and its surrounding ice shelves during the Last Interglacial (~120,000 years ago).  As part of this project, a 651-meter ice core was drilled to bedrock at Skytrain Ice Rise in Antarctica during the 2018/2019 field season.  Ions and elements originating from marine sources along with water isotope content in this ice core can be used to infer changes in ice sheet and ice shelf extent.  The stable water isotope signal has the potential to capture both regional climate change and changes in the elevation of the drilling site through time.  Marine chemical content in the ice core could indicate variability in the proximity of the site to a marine environment.  Water isotopes and chemical impurities in the ice core were analysed continuously using cavity ring down spectroscopy and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, respectively. As expected, δ18O and δD increase from the last glacial maximum to the Holocene.  δ18O and δD increase and sodium and magnesium levels decline from deglaciation into the early Holocene. δ18O and δD show an abrupt increase in the early Holocene at about 8,000 years before present.  Sea salt similarly increases 2-fold and becomes more variable about 1,000 years later (7,000 years before present).  These increases could indicate a retreat of the ice shelf to its current position.

How to cite: Grieman, M., Hoffmann, H., Humby, J., Mulvaney, R., Nehrbass-Ahles, C., Rowell, I., Thomas, E., and Wolff, E.: WACSWAIN project: isotope and chemical ice core records from Skytrain Ice Rise, Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5504, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5504, 2021.

EGU21-5890 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

The Young Island Ice Core - Climate Information of a Melty Archive

Dorothea Elisabeth Moser, Elizabeth R. Thomas, Sarah Jackson, Joel B. Pedro, and Bradley Markle

Climate data from the sub-Antarctic region are extremely sparse, with few records available beyond the instrumental period. Here, we investigate the suitability of the first-ever ice core collected from Young Island, in the NW Ross Sea, to capture changes in climate. Despite the presence of surface melt at this maritime location, our findings indicate that stable water isotope and trace element records can still hold potential for paleoclimate reconstruction. We apply two multi-proxy dating approaches based on winter and summer signatures, develop an ice core chronology, and contextualize our findings using a local automatic weather station and reanalysis data. Subsequently, we draw first conclusions about the surface conditions at Young Island and discuss the site’s potential for future studies aimed at paleoclimate reconstruction and resolving the effects of surface melt on proxy records.

How to cite: Moser, D. E., Thomas, E. R., Jackson, S., Pedro, J. B., and Markle, B.: The Young Island Ice Core - Climate Information of a Melty Archive, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5890, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5890, 2021.

EGU21-5973 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

A new ice core from the Eastern Summit of Mt. Elbrus, Caucasus, Russia

Stanislav Kutuzov, Vladimir Mikhalenko, Ivan Lavrantiev, Pavel Toropov, Diana Vladimirova, Andrey Abramov, and Vladimir Matskovsky

Meteorological regime and glacier surface heat balance, GPR measurements of the ice thickness and seasonal snow cover were investigated in the crater of the Eastern Summit of Mt. Elbrus In the period from 18 to 30 August 2020 at 560 m a.s.l. On the base of preliminary data analysis, the predominance of fluctuations in the synoptic scale over the diurnal ones was revealed; high values of the average and maximum wind speed associated with the influence of jet currents and with the effects of leeward storms were identified; extremely high temporal variability of relative humidity and its very high deficit in cloudless conditions, which contributes to intensive evaporation and sublimation from the snow surface, were explored. The maximum ice thickness in the crater reaches 100 m, with an average of 45 m. A new 96.01 m ice core from glacier surface to bedrock has been recovered. The drilling speed varied from 11 to 1 m / h, decreasing on average with depth from 4.5 to 4.0 m / h. The thickness of the snow-firn strata is about 20 m, which is three times less than on the Western Plateau. The borehole temperature was measured. The temperature on the glacier bedrock was -0.6 °С. The calculated heat flux was 0.39 W/m2. Air sampling was carried out in the crater of the Eastern Summit of Elbrus and on the Garabashi glacier. The repeated measurement of the soil temperature in the fumarole field on the Elbrus Eastern Summit outer crater rim suggests that the temperature regime is stable.

The research was carried out on the territory of the Elbrus National Park with the financial support of the Russian Science Foundation (project 17-17-01270).

How to cite: Kutuzov, S., Mikhalenko, V., Lavrantiev, I., Toropov, P., Vladimirova, D., Abramov, A., and Matskovsky, V.: A new ice core from the Eastern Summit of Mt. Elbrus, Caucasus, Russia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5973, 2021.

EGU21-6278 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

A shift to predominant multi-year sea ice conditions in the Baffin Bay and North Atlantic Ocean during the Holocene-Glacial transition inferred from the EGRIP ice core

Delia Segato, Francois Burgay, Niccolò Maffezzoli, Azzurra Spagnesi, Clara Turetta, Federico Scoto, Federico Dallo, Daniele Zannoni, Tobias Erhardt, Camilla Marie Jensen, Alfonso Saiz-Lopez, Helle Astrid Kjær, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, Carlo Barbante, and Andrea Spolaor

Arctic sea ice has been melting at unprecedented rates in the past decades. Understanding past sea ice variability is of paramount importance to contextualize recent changes and constrain global climate models. Bromine enrichment (Brenr), relative to sea-water ratio, has been introduced as a proxy of first-year sea ice conditions within the ocean region influencing the ice core location (Spolaor et al., 2013). Brenr has been measured in ice cores from Greenland, that is the NEEM and RECAP cores. NEEM sea ice proxies are influenced by the region of the Canadian Arctic and Baffin Bay, while for the RECAP core it is mainly the North Atlantic Ocean. In this study we present the first high-resolution record of bromine enrichment from the EGRIP ice core in Greenland for the last 15.7 kyr BP, covering the Holocene-Glacial transition.

From preliminary back-trajectory analyses we suggest that EGRIP sea ice proxy sources are located in a wide region in the Baffin Bay and North Atlantic Ocean. We find EGRIP Brenr values of ~1 during cold periods, that is the Younger Dryas (12.9 – 11.7 kyr BP) and the last part of the Oldest Dryas (15.7 – 14.7 kyr BP), which we associate with predominant multi-year sea ice conditions. During warmer periods, instead, we observe higher Brenr values, ~3 for the Bølling-Allerød period (14.7 – 12.9 kyr BP) and progressively higher values from the early Holocene onwards, likely associated with an increased seasonal sea ice area. EGRIP Brenr is consistent with NEEM and RECAP records and it has the potential to extend our knowledge on Arctic past sea ice variability.

 

Bibliography

Spolaor, A., Vallelonga, P., Plane, J. M. C., Kehrwald, N., Gabrieli, J., Varin, C., Turetta, C., Cozzi, G., Kumar, R., Boutron, C., and Barbante, C.: Halogen species record Antarctic sea ice extent over glacial–interglacial periods, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 13, 6623–6635, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-6623-2013, 2013.

How to cite: Segato, D., Burgay, F., Maffezzoli, N., Spagnesi, A., Turetta, C., Scoto, F., Dallo, F., Zannoni, D., Erhardt, T., Jensen, C. M., Saiz-Lopez, A., Kjær, H. A., Dahl-Jensen, D., Barbante, C., and Spolaor, A.: A shift to predominant multi-year sea ice conditions in the Baffin Bay and North Atlantic Ocean during the Holocene-Glacial transition inferred from the EGRIP ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6278, 2021.

Ice core gas records are an invaluable paleoclimatic archive. The three most abundant gases in air, nitrogen (N2), oxygen (O2), and argon (Ar), provide paleoclimatic information about both global and regional processes including tropical rainfall patterns and local surface temperature changes. We present a large dataset of elemental and isotopic ratios of N2, O2, and Ar (O2/N2, Ar/N2, δ15N, δ18O, & δ40Ar) from the South Pole Ice Core between 0 – 52,000 yr BP, with a focus on high precision δ15N and δ40Ar measurements between 5,000 – 32,000 yr BP. The unprecedented precision of our measurements allows us to use δ15Nexcess (= δ15N - δ40Ar/4) to reconstruct past temperature change at the South Pole. Although this proxy has been widely applied in Greenland, this is the first time it has been successfully applied to Antarctic ice and provides a valuable independent check on the more traditional water isotopes temperature proxy. We find good agreement between the two during the relatively stable climate of the glacial period and the Holocene. However the temperature reconstructions diverge during the deglaciation. We present several hypotheses that could explain the discrepancy and look to other emerging ice core temperature proxies to support our interpretation.

How to cite: Morgan, J., Buizert, C., and Severinghaus, J.: Isotopes of molecular nitrogen, oxygen, and argon in the South Pole ice core document local and global climate change through the last deglaciation., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6918, 2021.

EGU21-7473 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Dating of ice cores from temperate glaciers - Significant mass loss in the accumulation area of the Adamello glacier indicated by the chronology of a 46 m ice core

Theo Jenk, Daniela Festi, Margit Schwikowski, Valter Maggi, and Klaus Oeggl

Dating glaciers is an arduous yet essential task in ice core studies, which becomes even more challenging for the dating of glaciers suffering from mass loss in the accumulation zone as result of climate warming. In this context, we present the dating of a 46 m deep ice core from the Central Italian Alps retrieved in 2016 from the Adamello glacier (Pian di Neve, 3100 m a.s.l.). We will show how the timescale for the core could be obtained by integrating results from the analyses of the radionuclides 210Pb and 137Cs with annual layer counting derived from pollen and refractory black carbon concentrations. Our results clearly indicate that the surface of the glacier is older than the drilling date of 2016 by about 20 years and that the 46 m ice core reaches back to around 1944. Despite the severe mass loss affecting this glacier even in the accumulation zone, we show that it is possible to obtain a reliable timescale for such a temperate glacier. These results are very encouraging and open new perspectives on the potential of such glaciers as informative palaeoarchives. We thus consider it important to present our dating approach to a broader audience.

How to cite: Jenk, T., Festi, D., Schwikowski, M., Maggi, V., and Oeggl, K.: Dating of ice cores from temperate glaciers - Significant mass loss in the accumulation area of the Adamello glacier indicated by the chronology of a 46 m ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7473, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7473, 2021.

EGU21-7935 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

A novel high-resolution laser-melting sampler for discrete analyses of ion concentrations and stable water isotopic compositions in firn and ice cores

Yuko Motizuki, Yoichi Nakai, Kazuya Takahashi, Junya Hirose, Yu Vin Sahoo, Yasushige Yano, Masaki Yumoto, Masayuki Maruyama, Michio Sakashita, Kiwamu Kase, and Satoshi Wada

Ice cores preserve past climatic changes and, in some cases, astronomical signals. Here we present a newly developed automated ice-core sampler that employs laser melting. A hole in an ice core approximately 3 mm in diameter is melted and heated well below the boiling point by laser irradiation, and the meltwater is simultaneously siphoned by a 2 mm diameter movable evacuation nozzle that also holds the laser fiber. The advantage of sampling by laser melting is that molecular ion concentrations and stable water isotope compositions in ice cores can be measured at high depth resolution, which is advantageous for ice cores with low accumulation rates. This device takes highly discrete samples from ice cores, attaining depth resolution as small as ~3 mm with negligible cross contamination; the resolution can also be set at longer lengths suitable for validating longer-term profiles of various ionic and water isotopic constituents in ice cores. This technique allows the detailed reconstruction of past climatic changes at annual resolution and the investigation of transient ionic and isotopic signals within single annual layers in low-accumulation cores, potentially by annual layer counting.

How to cite: Motizuki, Y., Nakai, Y., Takahashi, K., Hirose, J., Sahoo, Y. V., Yano, Y., Yumoto, M., Maruyama, M., Sakashita, M., Kase, K., and Wada, S.: A novel high-resolution laser-melting sampler for discrete analyses of ion concentrations and stable water isotopic compositions in firn and ice cores, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7935, 2021.

EGU21-8842 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7 | Highlight

Ice Memory

Patrick Ginot, Jérôme Chappellaz, Carlo Barbante, Margit Schwikowski, and Anne-Catherine Ohlmann

With global change and its amplified impact at high altitudes or in certain regions of the world, mountain glaciers are particularly sensitive to warming. These same glaciers, which have been studied for several decades, have made it possible to reconstruct, through the study of ice cores, unique information on the evolution of the climate or the environment on a regional and global scale since they are located closer to the main regions and sources of aerosol emissions. Unfortunately, these archives are in the process of being altered and are disappearing. It is in this context that the international project ICE MEMORY was initiated in 2015. ICE MEMORY is built on four pillars : 1) Identify, select glacier and extract several complete ice cores, at least two, from sites that have already demonstrated their high scientific potential before they are altered, 2) Analyse one of the cores in order to extract the maximum parameters of information using all currently available technologies and make this data available to the scientific community of today and tomorrow, 3) Store the remaining cores in a naturally adapted site such as the French-Italien Concordia station in Antarctica so that they can be preserved and donated to future generations of scientists, and 4) to set up a sustainable governance system based on an accredited international organization in charge of managing these ice and data archives in the future.

This presentation will highlight all the operations, analyses and organization already achieved as well as the future vision and development of ICE MEMORY.

How to cite: Ginot, P., Chappellaz, J., Barbante, C., Schwikowski, M., and Ohlmann, A.-C.: Ice Memory, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8842, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8842, 2021.

EGU21-9337 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Understanding the evolution of atmospheric nitrous oxide over the last century from the stable isotopes of the firn air at Styx Glacier, East Antarctica

Sambit Ghosh, Sakae Toyoda, Jinho Ahn, Youngjoon Jang, and Naohiro Yoshida

The increase in mixing ratio of greenhouse gas (GHG) has been believed to be the primary driver for the ongoing global warming. Among the GHGs, the mixing ratio of nitrous oxide (N2O) has increased by 23% since 1750 CE. N2O has a long residence time of ca. 120 years, and a potential to destruct the ozone layer. The Global Warming Potential of N2O is about 300 times greater than that of CO2 over 100 years. However, the temporal changes in magnitude and geographic distribution of different N2O sources are uncertain, hence, understanding the dynamics of atmospheric N2O has been a challenge to the researcher during the last few decades. Here, we present new stable isotope data of N2O from the firn air at Styx Glacier, East Antarctica to comprehend the atmospheric evolution for the last 100 years. Our results show that the N2O mixing ratio has increased, whereas the δ15Nbulk (‰, AIR) and δ18O (‰, VSMOW) values decreased during the last 100 years, consistent with the existing firn air records. The progressive increase in the N2O mixing ratio and the decrease in the isotope ratios suggest a higher contribution from the anthropogenic sources assuming that the N2O flux from the natural sources is constant. Our box model analysis using the stable isotopes and mixing ratio data of N2O of Styx firn air suggests that anthropogenic N2O emission at 2014 CE was ca. 37.5% higher than 1919 CE. The box model calculation with Styx and other firn air and ice core data suggests that in comparison to the pre-industrial era, the total N2O emission is ca. 61% higher at present (2014 CE), where ca. 62% and 38% contributions are from natural and anthropogenic sources, respectively to the total N2O emission. The isotope-based mass-balance calculation indicates that continental emission was ca. 45% higher in 2014 CE than in 1919 CE. Although there is a large scatter in existing data, the site preference of 15N in N2O molecules (δ15NSP ‰, AIR) shows an increasing trend during the post-industrial era, which is consistent with the idea that enhanced fertilization increased soil N2O emissions by activating nitrification processes.

How to cite: Ghosh, S., Toyoda, S., Ahn, J., Jang, Y., and Yoshida, N.: Understanding the evolution of atmospheric nitrous oxide over the last century from the stable isotopes of the firn air at Styx Glacier, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9337, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9337, 2021.

EGU21-9900 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Micro-inclusions in the EGRIP ice core identified with Raman-spectroscopy

Nicolas Stoll, Jan Eichler, Maria Hörhold, Tobias Erhardt, and Ilka Weikusat

Soluble and insoluble impurities play a crucial role regarding the deformability and thus the flow of polar ice. To better understand this interplay from a mechanistic point of view it is especially important to investigate the location and chemical composition of micro-inclusions (Stoll et al., 2021), which are among the most abundant impurities in polar ice.

New results from a systematic analysis of micro-inclusions in Holocene ice from the East Greenland Ice Core Project (EGRIP), which has been drilled near the onset of the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS), offer unique insights into the dynamics of fast flowing ice over different scales, ranging from kilometres to micrometres.

Investigating the small-scale properties of eleven samples from Holocene ice, i.e. the upper 1340 m of the EGRIP ice core, we mapped the locations of several thousand micro-inclusions inside the ice. The use of cryo-Raman spectroscopy allowed us to obtain a representative overview of the mineralogy of these inclusions in the ice without the risk of contamination.

We identified a variety of Raman spectra, mainly from sulphates (dominated by gypsum) and terrestrial dust, such as quartz, mica and feldspar. The observed mineralogy changes with depth and EGRIP Holocene ice can be categorised in two different depth regimes, i.e. the upper (100-900 m) and lower (900-1340 m) regimes, depending on their mineralogy. Furthermore, micro-inclusions show certain spatial patterns, such as clustering or layering, which are partly related to their mineralogy. We thus conclude that Greenlandic Holocene ice has a broader, and more variable, mineralogy than previously reported and that chemical reactions might take place within the ice sheet, possibly altering the paleo-climate record. Our approach further demonstrates the added value of systematic, combined high-resolution impurity and microstructural studies, and the importance of considering different spatial scales and is thus another step towards a more holistic understanding of impurities in ice.

Ref:
Stoll N, Eichler J, Hörhold M, Shigeyama W and Weikusat I (2021) A Review of the Microstructural Location of Impurities in Polar Ice and Their Impacts on Deformation. Front. Earth Sci. 8:615613. doi: 10.3389/feart.2020.615613

How to cite: Stoll, N., Eichler, J., Hörhold, M., Erhardt, T., and Weikusat, I.: Micro-inclusions in the EGRIP ice core identified with Raman-spectroscopy, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9900, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9900, 2021.

EGU21-10171 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Atmospheric history of carbon monoxide since preindustrial times reconstructed from multiple Greenland ice cores

Xavier Faïn, Rachael Rhodes, Philip Place, Vasilii Petrenko, Kévin Fourteau, Nathan Chellman, Edward Crosier, Joe McConnell, Edward Brook, Thomas Blunier, Michel Legrand, Sophie Szopa, Kostas Tsigaridis, Vaishali Naik, and Jérôme Chappellaz

Carbon monoxide (CO) is a regulated pollutant and one of the key components determining the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere. Obtaining a reliable record of atmospheric CO mixing ratios since pre-industrial times is necessary to evaluate climate-chemistry models in conditions different from today. We present high-resolution measurements of CO mixing ratios from ice cores drilled at five different sites on the Greenland ice sheet which experience a range of snow accumulation rates, mean surface temperatures, and different chemical compositions. An optical-feedback cavity-enhanced absorption spectrometer (OF-CEAS) was coupled to continuous melter systems and operated during four analytical campaigns conducted between 2013 and 2019. The CFA-based CO measurements exhibit excellent external precision (ranging 3.3 - 6.6 ppbv, 1σ), and achieve consistently low blanks (ranging from 4.1±1.2 to 12.6±4.4 ppbv). Good accuracy and absolute calibration of CFA-based CO records enable paleo-atmospheric interpretations. The five CO records all exhibit variability in CO mixing ratios that is too large and rapid to reflect past atmospheric mixing ratio changes. Complementary tests conducted on discrete ice samples demonstrate that such patterns are not related to the analytical process (i.e., production of CO from organics in the ice during melting), but very likely are related to in situ CO production within the ice before analyses. Evaluation of signal resolution and co-investigation of high-resolution records of CO and TOC show that past atmospheric CO concentration can be extracted from the records’ baselines at four sites with accumulation rates higher than 20 cm water equivalent per year (weq yr-1). However, such baselines should be taken as upper bounds of past atmospheric CO burden. CO records from four sites are combined to produce a multisite average ice core reconstruction of past atmospheric CO for the Northern Hemisphere high latitudes, covering the period from 1700 to 1957 CE. From 1700 to 1875 CE, this record reveals stable or slightly increasing values remaining in the 100-115 ppbv range. From 1875 to 1957 CE, the record indicates a monotonic increase from 114±4 ppbv to 147±6 ppbv. The ice-core multisite CO record exhibits an excellent overlap with the atmospheric CO record from Greenland firn air which span the 1950-2010 time period. The combined ice-core and firn air CO history, spanning 1700-2010 CE, largely exhibits patterns that are consistent with the recent anthropogenic and biomass burning CO emission inventories. This brand new time series will be compared with the most recent results from Earth System Models involved in the CMIP6-AerChemMIP multi-model exercise.

How to cite: Faïn, X., Rhodes, R., Place, P., Petrenko, V., Fourteau, K., Chellman, N., Crosier, E., McConnell, J., Brook, E., Blunier, T., Legrand, M., Szopa, S., Tsigaridis, K., Naik, V., and Chappellaz, J.: Atmospheric history of carbon monoxide since preindustrial times reconstructed from multiple Greenland ice cores, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10171, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10171, 2021.

EGU21-10362 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

On the relationship between stable isotopes and major impurity species as inferred from a two-dimensional firn sampling approach at EDML, East Antarctica

Thomas Münch, Maria Hörhold, Johannes Freitag, Melanie Behrens, and Thomas Laepple

Ice cores constitute a major palaeoclimate archive by recording, among many others, the atmospheric variations of stable oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition of water and of soluble ionic impurities. While impurities are used as proxies for, e.g., variations in sea ice, marine biological activity and volcanism, stable isotope records are the main source of information for the reconstruction of polar temperature changes.

However, such reconstruction efforts are complicated by the fact that temperature is by far not the only driver of isotopic composition changes. A single isotopic ice-core record will comprise variations caused by a multitude of processes, from variable atmospheric circulation and moisture pathways to the intermittency of precipitation and finally to the mixing and re-location of surface snow by wind drift (stratigraphic noise). Under the assumption that specific trace components are originally deposited with the precipitated snow and its isotopic composition, the retrieved impurity records should display a similar spatial and seasonal to interannual variability as the isotope records, caused by local stratigraphic noise as well as the time-variable and intermittent precipitation patterns, respectively.

In this contribution, we investigate the possible relationship between isotope and impurity data at the East Antarctic low-accumulation site EDML. We sampled and analysed isotopic composition and major impurity species on a four metre deep and 50 metre long trench. This enables us (1) to study the spatial (horizontal times vertical) relationship in the data, and (2) to analyse and compare the seasonal and interannual variability after removing the strong contribution of local stratigraphic noise. By this, the study improves our understanding of the depositional mechanisms that play an important role for the formation of ice-core records, and it offers to investigate the potential of using impurities to correct isotopic variability in order to improve temperature reconstructions.

How to cite: Münch, T., Hörhold, M., Freitag, J., Behrens, M., and Laepple, T.: On the relationship between stable isotopes and major impurity species as inferred from a two-dimensional firn sampling approach at EDML, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10362, 2021.

EGU21-11820 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Forty years later: High resolution continuous flow analysis of the Dye3 ice core

Helle Astrid Kjær, Margaret Harlan, Paul Vallelonga, Anders Svensson, Thomas Blunier, Todd Sowers, James Andrew Menking, Aylin de Campo, Janani Venkatesh, Jesper Liisberg, David Soestmeyer, Valerie Morris, Bruce Vaughn, and Bo Vinther
The Dye-3 ice core was drilled to bedrock at the Southern part of the central Greenland ice sheet (65°11'N, 43°50'W) in 1979-1981. The southern location is characterized by high accumulation rates compared to more central locations of the ice sheet. Since its drilling, numerous analyses of the core have been performed, and the ice has since been in freezer storage both in the USA and in Denmark.
In October and November 2019, the remaining ice, two mostly complete sections covering the depths of 1753–1820m and 1865–1918m of the Dye-3 core, were melted during a continuous flow analysis (CFA) campaign at the Physics of Ice, Climate, and Earth (PICE) group at the University of Copenhagen. The data represents both Holocene, Younger Dryas and Glacial sections (GS 5 to 12).
 
The measured data consist chemistry and impurities contained in the ice, isotopes, as well as analysis of methane and other atmospheric gases. 
The chemistry measurements include NH4+, Ca2+, and Na+ ions, which besides being influenced by transport, provide information about forest fires, wind-blown dust, and sea ice, respectively, as well as acidity, which aids in the identification of volcanic events contained in the core. The quantity and grain size distribution of insoluble particles was analyzed by means of an Abakus laser particle counter.
 
We compare the new high-resolution CFA record of dye3 with previous analysis and thus evaluate the progress made over 40 years. Further we compare overlapping time periods with other central Greenland ice cores and discuss spatial patterns in relation to the presented climate proxies.

How to cite: Kjær, H. A., Harlan, M., Vallelonga, P., Svensson, A., Blunier, T., Sowers, T., Menking, J. A., de Campo, A., Venkatesh, J., Liisberg, J., Soestmeyer, D., Morris, V., Vaughn, B., and Vinther, B.: Forty years later: High resolution continuous flow analysis of the Dye3 ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11820, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11820, 2021.

EGU21-12455 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Stratigraphic noise in isotope records on the East Antarctic Plateau; new insights from an array of firn profiles

Nora Hirsch, Alexandra Zuhr, Thomas Münch, Maria Hörhold, Johannes Freitag, Remi Dallmayr, and Thomas Laepple

EGU21-12552 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Global biosphere primary productivity over the last 800,000 years reconstructed from the triple-isotope composition of dioxygen trapped in polar ice cores

Ji-Woong Yang, Amaëlle Landais, Margaux Brandon, Thomas Blunier, Frédéric Prié, Stéphanie Duchamp-Alphonse, Thomas Extier, and Nathaëlle Bouttes

The primary production, or oxygenic photosynthesis of the global biosphere, is one of the main source and sink of atmospheric oxygen (O2) and carbon dioxide (CO2), respectively. There has been a growing number of evidence that global gross primary productivity (GPP) varies in response to climate change. It is therefore important to understand the climate- and/or environment controls of the global biosphere primary productivity for better predicting the future evolution of biosphere carbon uptake. The triple-isotope composition of O217O of O2) trapped in polar ice cores allows us to trace the past changes of global biosphere primary productivity as far back as 800,000 years before present (800 ka). Previously available Δ17O of O2 records over the last ca. 450 ka show relatively low and high global biosphere productivity over the last five glacial and interglacial intervals respectively, with a unique pattern over Termination V (TV) - Marine Isotopic Stage (MIS) 11, as biosphere productivity at the end of TV is ~ 20 % higher than the four younger ones (Blunier et al., 2012; Brandon et al., 2020). However, questions remain on (1) whether the concomitant changes of global biosphere productivity and CO2 were the pervasive feature of glacial periods over the last 800 ka, and (2) whether the global biosphere productivity during the “lukewarm” interglacials before the Mid-Brunhes Event (MBE) were lower than those after the MBE.
Here, we present an extended composite record of Δ17O of O2 covering the last 800 ka, based on new Δ17O of O2 results from the EPICA Dome C and reconstruct the evolution of global biosphere productivity over that time interval using the independent box models of Landais et al. (2007) and Blunier et al. (2012). We find that the glacial productivity minima occurred nearly synchronously with the glacial CO2 minima at mid-glacial stage; interestingly millennia before the sea level reaches their minima. Following the mid-glacial minima, we also show slight productivity increases at the full-glacial stages, before deglacial productivity rises. Comparison of reconstructed interglacial productivity demonstrates a slightly higher productivity over the post-MBE (MISs 1, 5, 7, 9, and 11) than pre-MBE ones (MISs 13, 15, 17, and 19). However, the mean difference between post- and pre-MBE interglacials largely depends on the box model used for productivity reconstruction.

How to cite: Yang, J.-W., Landais, A., Brandon, M., Blunier, T., Prié, F., Duchamp-Alphonse, S., Extier, T., and Bouttes, N.: Global biosphere primary productivity over the last 800,000 years reconstructed from the triple-isotope composition of dioxygen trapped in polar ice cores, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12552, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12552, 2021.

EGU21-12623 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

A tentative attempt to better trace the late Pleistocene oxygen cycle

Ji-Woong Yang, Thomas Extier, Martin Kölling, Amaëlle Landais, Gaëlle Leloup, Didier Paillard, Margaux Brandon, and Thomas Blunier

Atmospheric abundance of oxygen (O2) has been co-evolved with different aspects of the Earth system since appearance of oxygenic photosynthesis by cyanobacteria around 2.4 109 years before present (Ga). Therefore, much attention has been paid to understand the changes in O2 and the underlying mechanisms over the Earth’s history. The pioneering work by Stolper et al. (2016) revealed the long-term decreasing trend of O2 mixing ratios over the last 800,000 years using the ice-core composite record of molar ratios of O2 and nitrogen (δ(O2/N2)), implying a slight imbalance between sources and sinks. Over geological time scale, O2 is mainly controlled by burial and oxidation of organic carbon and pyrite, but also by oxidation of volcanic gases and sedimentary rocks. Nevertheless, the O2 cycle of the late Pleistocene has not been well understood, partly due to the lack of knowledge about the individual sources and sinks. Since then, Kölling et al. (2019) proposed a simple model to estimate the O2 release/uptake fluxes due to the pyrite burial/oxidation that predicts up to ~70% of the O2 decrease of the last 800,000 years could be explained by pyrite burial/oxidation.

Building on this, we present here our preliminary, tentative attempt for reconstruction of the net organic carbon burial flux over the last 800,000 years by combining available information (including new δ(O2/N2) data) and assuming constant O2 fluxes associated with volcanic outgassing and rock weathering. The long-term organic carbon burial flux trend obtained with our new calculations is similar to the global ocean δ13C records but also to simulations using a conceptual carbon cycle model (Paillard, 2017). These results partly support the geomorphological hypothesis that the major sea-level drops during the earlier period of the last 800,000 years lead to enhanced organic carbon burial, and that significant changes in the net organic carbon happen around Marine Isotopic Stage (MIS) 13. In addition, we present the long-term decreasing trend of the global biosphere productivity, or gross photosynthetic O2 flux, reconstructed from new measurements of triple-isotope composition of atmospheric O2 trapped in ice cores. As the largest O2 flux, the observed decrease in gross photosynthesis requires to be compensated by parallel reduction of global ecosystem respiration.

How to cite: Yang, J.-W., Extier, T., Kölling, M., Landais, A., Leloup, G., Paillard, D., Brandon, M., and Blunier, T.: A tentative attempt to better trace the late Pleistocene oxygen cycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12623, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12623, 2021.

EGU21-13150 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

A stratigraphy-based method for reconstructing ice core orientation

Julien Westhoff, Nicolas Stoll, Steven Franke, Ilka Weikusat, Paul Bons, Johanna Kerch, Daniela Jansen, Sepp Kipfstuhl, and Dorthe Dahl-Jensen

Ever since the first deep ice cores were drilled, it has been a challenge to determine their original, in-situ orientation. In general, the orientation of an ice core is lost as the drill is free to rotate during transport to the surface. For shallow ice cores, it is usually possible to match the adjacent core breaks, which preserves the orientation of the ice column. However, this method fails for deep ice cores, such as the EastGRIP ice core in Northeast Greenland. We provide a method to reconstruct ice core orientation using visual stratigraphy and borehole geometry. As the EastGRIP ice core is drilled through the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream, we use information about the directional structures to perform a full geographical re-orientation. We compared the core orientation with logging data from core break matching and the pattern of the stereographic projections of the crystals’c-axis orientations. Both comparisons agree very well with the proposed orientation method. The method works well for 441 out of 451 samples from a depth of 1375–2120 m in the EastGRIP ice core. It can also be applied to other ice cores, providing a better foundation for interpreting physical properties and understanding the flow of ice.

How to cite: Westhoff, J., Stoll, N., Franke, S., Weikusat, I., Bons, P., Kerch, J., Jansen, D., Kipfstuhl, S., and Dahl-Jensen, D.: A stratigraphy-based method for reconstructing ice core orientation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13150, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13150, 2021.

EGU21-13253 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

PANDA, the French analytical platform dedicated to ice core

Sophie Darfeuil, Patrick Ginot, Joel Savarino, Nicolas Caillon, Xavier Faïn, Gregory Teste, Amaelle Landais, Elise Fourré, Bénédicte Minster, and Frédéric Prié

Since 2018, under the impetus of the IGE (Grenoble) and the LSCE (Saclay) and the common interest of the "Carottes de Glace France" consortium, an analytical platform dedicated to glacier archives was created to meet the growing analytical needs requested by projects involving French partners (Ice Memory, EAIIST, BE-OI ...) and international collaborations with a ten-year vision. Within this framework 5 modules have been developed between the IGE and the LSCE. 3 modules are installed at the IGE, including a CHEMISTRY module which includes a large number of instruments coupled to the CFA (Continuous Flow Analysis) system, allowing high-resolution multi tracer analysis on a single ice stick (water isotopes, dust, conductivity, colorimetry, black carbon, trace metals and gas) as well as several auto-samplers for discrete analyses (major ions, organic species, trace metals, sugars ...). The GAS module is shared between continuous analyses on the CFA system (laser spectrometry CH4/CO) and discrete analyses (Gas chromatography CH4/CO2). The ISOTOPY module allows the analysis of nitrogen (N), sulfur (S) and oxygen (O) isotopes. At the LSCE, the WATER ISOTOPY module allows continuous (Picarro coupled to a CFA line equipped with conductivity cells and auto-sampler) or discrete (Picarro or mass spectrometer) analyses for δD, δ18O and δ17O in water. The AIR ISOTOPY module completes the platform for analyses by mass spectrometry of δ15N of N2, the triple isotopic composition of O2 and noble gases isotopes (36/38/40 Ar; 82/84/86 Kr; 129-132 Xe). An overview of the capacity and performance of the platform will be presented.

How to cite: Darfeuil, S., Ginot, P., Savarino, J., Caillon, N., Faïn, X., Teste, G., Landais, A., Fourré, E., Minster, B., and Prié, F.: PANDA, the French analytical platform dedicated to ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13253, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13253, 2021.

EGU21-14089 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Estimating the diffusion length in the deepest section of ice cores; A case study for MIS19 in Dome-C

Thomas Laepple, Thomas Münch, Torben Kunz, Mathieu Casado, and Maria Hoerhold

To recover very old climate information from ice core records, one needs to interpret the deepest part of an ice core. As the oldest record, the Dome-C ice core can serve as an analogue for the Beyond EPICA Oldest Ice Core that is currently being drilled.

Pol et al., EPSL 2010 analyzed high resolution water isotope data from the Dome-C ice core and found evidence for a limited preservation of climate variability in the deep section of the core due to mixing and diffusion. For instance, for Marine Isotope Stage 19, the study estimated a mixing/diffusion length between 40 and 60 cm, a value more than double than what is predicted by current firn and ice diffusion models. Knowing the diffusion length is important to interpret the isotope signal and is the basis to deconvolve climate records. As a result, it is key to bridge the gap in the estimation of the diffusion length between potentially biased statistical methods and firn and ice diffusion models.
We review this diffusion length estimate for MIS19, and also outline a new general method how to estimate the diffusion length in highly thinned deep ice.  This approach presents an important tool for better characterizing the preservation of the climate signal in old ice and thus for designing optimal sampling and recovery strategies.

 

How to cite: Laepple, T., Münch, T., Kunz, T., Casado, M., and Hoerhold, M.: Estimating the diffusion length in the deepest section of ice cores; A case study for MIS19 in Dome-C, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14089, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14089, 2021.

EGU21-14131 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Post-depositional processes visible in the integration of EGRIP high-resolution water isotope record and visual stratigraphy

Valerie Morris, Julien Westhoff, Bruce Vaughn, Ilka Weikusat, Tyler Jones, Bradley Markle, Abigail Hughes, William Skorski, Chloe Brashear, Vasileios Gkinis, Bo Vinther, and James White

With recent advances in analytical techniques, water stable isotope ratios can be measured in astounding detail in ice core records (~mm scale or equivalent to subannual resolution). While this has enabled the study of past climates across a vast range of timescales, the full set of processes driving the highest frequency variability in these water isotope records remains poorly understood. In the EastGRIP ice core, we observe a strong relationship between high-frequency water isotope anomalies (sharp transitions on the scale of cms) and variability in the visual stratigraphy of the ice. The water isotope timeseries reveals these anomalies that would otherwise be missed using traditional lower resolution discrete sampling methods (5-50 cm scale).  A comparison with the dark-field imaging of stratigraphic layers (high-resolution line-scanning system; 50µm/pix) from the EGRIP ice core indicates a correlation between bubble-free ice layers and the sharp transitions observed in the isotope record.  Prior to this comparison, such anomalies in high-resolution isotope records were often dismissed as analytical artifacts. The striking correspondence to the bubble-free ice layers, which is a parameter measured independently from the isotopes, suggests the isotope variability is real. We are investigating a range of depositional and post-depositional processes that may may be able to explain the origin of this variability and its relationship to the physical properties of the ice. This study has implications for frequency analysis of the isotope data, and the related analysis of isotope diffusion and its effects on the recorded climate signal. Understanding these anomalies opens new doors to the interpretation of climate signals in ice cores.

How to cite: Morris, V., Westhoff, J., Vaughn, B., Weikusat, I., Jones, T., Markle, B., Hughes, A., Skorski, W., Brashear, C., Gkinis, V., Vinther, B., and White, J.: Post-depositional processes visible in the integration of EGRIP high-resolution water isotope record and visual stratigraphy, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14131, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14131, 2021.

EGU21-14405 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Progress on absolute dating of ice cores with Argon isotopes

Anais Orsi, Ilaria Crotti, Roxanne Jacob, Amaelle Landais, and Elise Fourré

In the search for very old ice, finding the age of the ice is a key parameter necessary for its interpretation. Most ice core dating method are based on chronological markers that require the ice to be in stratigraphic order. However, the oldest ice is likely to be found at the bottom of ice sheets, where the stratigraphy is disturbed, or in ablation areas, where the classical methods cannot be used. Absolute dating techniques have recently been developed to provide new constraints on the age of old ice, but their development in the context of ice cores is limited by the large sample size required. Here, we discuss the analytical performances of a new technique for 40Ar dating, which allows us to provide a reliable age with 80g of ice rather than 800g, as previously published. We present an application to the dating of the bottom of the TALDICE and Dome C ice cores. This method represents a significant advance for its application to the very precious ice at the bottom of ice cores.

How to cite: Orsi, A., Crotti, I., Jacob, R., Landais, A., and Fourré, E.: Progress on absolute dating of ice cores with Argon isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14405, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14405, 2021.

EGU21-15782 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Continuous flow analysis of the Mount Brown South ice core

Margaret Harlan, Helle Astrid Kjær, Tessa Vance, Paul Vallelonga, Vasileios Gkinis, Thomas Blunier, Anders Svensson, Andrew Moy, Chris Plummer, Sarah Jackson, Kerttu Peensoo, and Aylin de Campo

The Mount Brown South (MBS) ice core is an approximately 300-meter-long ice core, drilled in 2016-2017 to the south of Mount Brown, Wilhelm II Land, East Antarctica. This location in East Antarctica was chosen as it produces an ice core with well-preserved sub-annual records of both chemistry and isotope concentrations, spanning back over 1000 years. MBS is particularly well suited to represent climate variations of the Indian Ocean sector of Antarctica, and to provide information about regional volcanism in the Southern Indian Ocean region.

A section of ice spanning the length of the MBS core was melted as part of the autumn 2019 continuous flow analysis (CFA) campaign at the Physics of Ice, Climate, and Earth (PICE) group at the University of Copenhagen. During this campaign, measurements were conducted for chemistry and impurities contained in the ice, in addition to water isotopes. The data measured in Copenhagen include measurements of H2O2, pH, electrolytic conductivity, and NH4+, Ca2+, and Na+ ions, in addition to insoluble particulate concentrations and size distribution measured using an Abakus laser particle counter.

Here, we present an overview of the CFA chemistry and impurity data, as well as preliminary investigations into the size distribution of insoluble particles and the presence of volcanic material within the ice. These initial chemistry and particulate size distribution data sets are useful in order to identify sections of the MBS core to subject to further analysis to increase our understanding of volcanic activity in the Southern Indian Ocean region.

How to cite: Harlan, M., Kjær, H. A., Vance, T., Vallelonga, P., Gkinis, V., Blunier, T., Svensson, A., Moy, A., Plummer, C., Jackson, S., Peensoo, K., and de Campo, A.: Continuous flow analysis of the Mount Brown South ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15782, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15782, 2021.

In the last decade, several efforts have been carried out to assess the causes of the current rapid recent warming measured on West Antarctica and Antarctic Peninsula. The increase in wind strength and shifts in atmospheric circulation patterns have shown to play a key role in driving the advection of warm air from mid-latitudes to high-latitudes. Winds are also responsible for driving surface melting in the ice shelves, enhancing the removal of surface snow, and for promoting basal melting through the upwelling of deep warm water. All these combined have shown to produce substantial effects on environmental parameters, such as sea surface temperatures, sea ice extension, air surface temperatures and precipitation.

Even though winds are fundamental components of the climatic system, there is a lack of reliable long-term observational wind records in the region. This has hindered the ability to place the recent observed changes in the context of a longer time frame.

In this work, we present annual and sub-annual records of marine diatoms preserved in a set of ice cores retrieved from the southern Antarctic Peninsula and Ellsworth Land region, Antarctica. The diatom abundance and species assemblages from these ice cores prove to represent the local/regional variability in wind strength and circulation patterns that influence the onshore northerly winds.  The spatial distribution of these ice cores enabled to identify regional trends (coastal/inland) and to validate the proxy across the region. Our findings highlight the potential this novel proxy to produce an annual reconstruction of westerly winds in the Amundsen - Bellingshausen seas region.

 

How to cite: Tetzner, D., Thomas, L., and Allen, C.: Diatoms in Ice Cores, a new proxy for reconstructing past wind strength in the Amundsen-Bellingshausen Seas region, Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15893, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15893, 2021.

EGU21-16037 | vPICO presentations | CL1.7

Exploring ice core sea ice proxies through process-based modelling

Rachael Rhodes, Xin Yang, and Eric Wolff

It is important to understand the magnitude and rate of past sea ice changes, as well as their timing relative to abrupt shifts in other components of Earth’s climate system. Furthermore, records of past sea ice over the last few centuries are urgently needed to assess the scale of natural (internal) variability over decadal timescales. By continuously recording past atmospheric composition, polar ice cores have the potential to document changing sea ice conditions if atmospheric chemistry is altered.  Sea salt aerosol, specifically sodium (Na), and bromine enrichment (Brenr, Br/Na enriched relative to seawater ratio) are two ice core sea ice proxies suggested following this premise.

Here we aim to move beyond a conceptual understanding of the controls on Na and Brenr in ice cores by using process-based modelling to test hypotheses. We present results of experiments using a 3D global chemical transport model (p-TOMCAT) that represents marine aerosol emission, transport and deposition. Critically, the complex atmospheric chemistry of bromine is also included allowing us to explore the partitioning of Br between gas and aerosol phases.  

How to cite: Rhodes, R., Yang, X., and Wolff, E.: Exploring ice core sea ice proxies through process-based modelling, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16037, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16037, 2021.

CL1.8 – Climate response to orbital forcing

EGU21-1051 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

Diverse Regional Sensitivity of Summer Precipitation in East Asia to Ice Volume, CO2 and Astronomical Forcing

Anqi Lyu, Qiuzhen Yin, Michel Crucifix, and Youbin Sun

The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) is an important component of the climate system and it influences about one-third of the world’s population. Numerous paleoclimate records and climate simulations have been used to study its long-term evolution and response to different forcings. The strong regional dependence of the EASM variation questions the relative role of ice sheets and insolation on the EASM precipitation in different sub-regions in East Asia. A Gaussian emulator, which was generated and calibrated by interpolating the outputs of 61 snapshot simulations performed with the model HadCM3, is used to quantitatively assess how astronomical forcing, CO2 and northern hemisphere ice sheets affect the variation of the summer precipitation over the last 800 ky. Our results show that in the north of 25°N of the EASM domain, the variation of the summer precipitation is dominated by precession and insolation. This leads to strong 23-ky cycles in the summer precipitation. However, in the southern part (south of 25°N), the impact of ice volume becomes more important, leading to strong 100-ky cycles. Ice sheets influence the summer precipitation in the south mainly through its control on the location of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) which is very sensitive to ice volume. ITCZ is shifted significantly to the south under large ice sheets conditions. Therefore, the region under control of the ITCZ is more sensitive to the influence of ice volume than other regions. Our results also show that obliquity and CO2 have relatively small effect on the summer precipitation as compared to precession and ice sheets.

How to cite: Lyu, A., Yin, Q., Crucifix, M., and Sun, Y.: Diverse Regional Sensitivity of Summer Precipitation in East Asia to Ice Volume, CO2 and Astronomical Forcing, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1051, 2021.

EGU21-1433 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Insolation-paced sea level during the Early Pleistocene, Taiwan

Romain Vaucher, Shahin E. Dashtgard, Chorng-Shern Horng, Christian Zeeden, Antoine Dillinger, Yu-Yen Pan, Romy Ari Setiaji, Wen-Rong Chi, and Ludvig Löwemark

The Pleistocene was a phase of global cooling of the Earth through which glacial-interglacial cycles occurred, and the growth and decay of the ice-sheets resulted in quasi-cyclic sea-level fluctuations driven by orbital forcing. Despite that summer insolation is mostly controlled by precession, the records of the glacial cycles showcase a significant periodicity of ~41 kyrs during the Early Pleistocene forced by Earth’s obliquity (tilt) that varies the latitudinal distribution of insolation especially in high latitudes. The dominance of obliquity over precession in marine archives is commonly attributed to the in-phase effect of obliquity-related insolation versus the opposite-phased influence of precession, which may cancel out the summer insolation signal received by the southern and northern hemispheres.

Here, we present a clastic shallow marine record from the Cholan Formation (Early Pleistocene; Taiwan). Facies analysis indicates that quasi-cyclic deposition occurred in shoreface to offshore environments in the paleo-Taiwan Strait. The magnetobiostratigraphic framework indicates that the studied section occurs in the lower part of the Matuyama subchron (1.925 - 2.595 Ma) close to the lower limit of the Olduvai (1.925 Ma) normal polarity subchron. Comparison of the stratigraphy to a d18O isotope record of benthic foraminifera and orbital curves of precession and obliquity at the time of sediment accumulation reveals a good correlation between depositional cycles and the Northern Hemisphere summer insolation, demonstrating precession dominated sea-level fluctuations during the Early Pleistocene. These results underpin recent findings suggesting that d18O isotope records of benthic foraminifera have a more significant precession signal than previously described. This study also demonstrates that shallow-marine stratigraphic successions in high-accommodation and high-sedimentation basins can be outstanding climate archives, possibly even preserving sediment flux responding to half-precession cycles.

How to cite: Vaucher, R., Dashtgard, S. E., Horng, C.-S., Zeeden, C., Dillinger, A., Pan, Y.-Y., Setiaji, R. A., Chi, W.-R., and Löwemark, L.: Insolation-paced sea level during the Early Pleistocene, Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1433, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1433, 2021.

EGU21-1499 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Jovian Planets influence on the Earth’s Temperature Variability

Harald Yndestad

Abstract

A possible relation between plants period oscillations and the Earth´s temperature variability reveals deterministic variations in the Earth´s temperature variability. This study is based on a deterministic solar-lunar model, a wavelet spectrum analysis of global temperature data series from 1850 and a wavelet spectrum analysis of Greenland temperature (GISP-2) from 2000BC.

 

The results reveal a period- and phase-relation between the Jovian planets, Total Solar Irradiation variability from 1700, global sea temperature variability from 1850 and Greenland temperature variability from 2000B.C. in a multidecadal spectrum of 4480 years. The results are explained by interference between accumulated solar-forced and lunar-forced periods in oceans. The climate response from solar-lunar forced periods explain Grand Solar minimum periods from 1000A.D. the Little Ice Age from 1640 to 1850, the Deep Freeze minimum at 1710 A.D. and the global temperature growth from 1850 to 2000. The solar-lunar model computes a modern global maximum temperature at 2030A.D. and an upcoming Grand Solar minimum at 2062A.D. and an upcoming deep temperature minimum at 2070A.D.

 

Keywords: Solar-lunar interference; Deep solar minima; Earth’s temperature variability; Global temperature minima.

 

How to cite: Yndestad, H.: Jovian Planets influence on the Earth’s Temperature Variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1499, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1499, 2021.

The middle Piacenzian period is the closest sustained warm interval and a possible analog to the future climate. It is well known that global ice volume exhibits dominant 41-kyr cyclicities. However, high resolution terrestrial paleoenvironmental records are scare. Here we present a 3.6 kyr terrestrial environmental variation record from Teruel Basin of Spain and compare the results with the East Asian monsoon records. The Spain results show dominant 41-kyr cycles during the early Piacenzian (3.3-3.15 Ma) when eccentricity was at minimum, but the 41-kyr cycles weakens during the late Piacenzian 3.15-2.95 Ma when eccentricity got increased, suggesting direct forcing by insolation. This pattern is different from the monsoonal records from China, which demonstrates persistent 20-kyr cycles during the entire middle Piacenzian. The strong 41-kyr cycles in westerly region during the early Piacenzian may originate from its higher latitude and higher sensitivity to insolation gradient forcing.

How to cite: Gao, P. and Nie, J.: Diverse manifestations of insolation forcing of environmental changes during the middle Piacenzian, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1733, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1733, 2021.

EGU21-1914 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

One million years of seasonal seesaw in East Asian monsoon winds

Jie Huang and Michael Sarnthein

Glacial-to-interglacial variations in East Asian summer and winter monsoon are widely ascribed to orbital and/or global ice-sheet forcing. However, the relative impact of orbital and millennial-scale factors on Pleistocene variations in East Asian monsoon still remain controversial. To better constrain the differential response of seasonal monsoon winds over the last million years we present paired records of siliciclastic silt grain sizes, pollen, minerals, and geochemical tracers obtained from high-sedimentation rate deposits at ODP Sites 1144 and 1146 in the northern South China Sea. The proxy records show that loess-style dust supply of winter monsoon was dominant and fluvial input reduced during peak glacials over the last 900 kyr, moreover, during Heinrich stadials, while fluvial mud marked interglacial regimes as result of enhanced summer monsoon, then completely superimposing the weakened dust input of winter monsoon. A dominating superposition of fluvial mud on top of eolian dust, however, also prevailed during the initial part of most glacial stages during and after the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT), in part possibly modulated by long-term groundwater reserves and/or unknown climate forcings linked to the southern Hemisphere. Prior to the MPT, during glacial stages 24–32, prolonged groundwater reserves and/or a more limited extent of northern-Hemisphere ice sheets, or unknown southern Hemisphere forcing may have controlled an ongoing interglacial-style humid climate in East Asia. In summary, our findings suggest that variations of sediment signals of seasonal East Asian monsoon variability in part may have been more sensitive to secondary factors of groundwater storage, plant cover as well as to the redistribution of insolation energy amongst various climate subsystems than to direct orbital and/or northern ice-sheet forcing.

How to cite: Huang, J. and Sarnthein, M.: One million years of seasonal seesaw in East Asian monsoon winds, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1914, 2021.

EGU21-2174 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Modelling the sedimentary response to orbital variations. 

David De Vleeschouwer and Maximilian Vahlenkamp

Carbonate-rich middle Eocene sedimentary sequences are relatively scarce, hampering the reconstruction of paleoclimate dynamics within this high-CO2 world. Nevertheless, the Newfoundland Ridge (North-Atlantic Ocean) hosts a unique sedimentary archive of middle Eocene paleoceanographic change at astronomical 104-year resolution. International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Sites U1408 and U1410 exhibit well-defined lithologic alternations between calcareous ooze and clay-rich intervals, occurring at the obliquity beat and associated with changing intensities of Northern Component Water (NCW) formation (Vahlenkamp et al., 2018). These lithological variations are captured by the calcium-iron ratio (Ca/Fe) proxy as a measure of carbonate content. Yet, the asymmetric shape of the Ca/Fe cycles immediately reflects a strong non-linear response to the sinusoidal obliquity forcing. To explore the causes of this non-linearity, we built a simple physically-motivated and time-dependent model that simulates the sedimentary response at IODP Sites U1408 and U1410 between 46 and 42 million years ago.  

dy/dt = 1/T (bx – y)

The orbital input x constitutes of an insolation gradient during boreal winter (more specifically at winter solstice), as NCW formation is a high northern latitude winter process that depends on the Atlantic interhemispheric temperature gradient (Karas et al., 2017; Vahlenkamp et al., 2018). The latitudes between which the insolation gradient x is calculated is not user-prescribed but part of the parametrization of the model. Two further parameters define the model. The characteristic time constant T accelerates (T < 1) or slows the response to the forcing (T > 1), whereas the base of the exponential-response term b determines the degree of non-linearity in the system. We explored this four-space first with a coarse and then with a finer mesh, and found that the optimum model lies in the neighbourhood of the following values: latitudinal gradient between 63°N and 31°S, T = 4.94 kyr, b = 2.13. The corresponding system reproduces the asymmetric shape of the Ca/Fe cycles, while also exhibiting precession-obliquity interference patterns that occur in the proxy series. These kind of simple modelling efforts hold the potential to refine our mechanistic understanding of the Earth System response to astronomical forcing in the deep and warmer-than-present geologic past.

Karas et al. (2017) Pliocene oceanic seaways and global climate. Scientific Reports 7: 39842

Vahlenkamp et al. (2018) Astronomically paced changes in deep-water circulation in the western North Atlantic during the middle Eocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letter 484: 329 – 340.

 

 

How to cite: De Vleeschouwer, D. and Vahlenkamp, M.: Modelling the sedimentary response to orbital variations. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2174, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2174, 2021.

EGU21-2697 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Orbital-scale climatic record in the North China across the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition

Ze Zhang, Zhixiang Wang, and Chunju Huang

The Pliocene - Pleistocene period (3.6-1.8 Ma) was a significant global cooling time, from very warm, equable climates to high-amplitude glacial-interglacial cycles. The origin of glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere, and the mechanisms by which glacial cycles have expanded since the late Pliocene, remain a subject of ongoing discussion. The studies of the Pliocene orbital scale climate evolution mainly are focused on marine sediments and loess-paleosoil sequences, however, there are few records of continental lacustrine facies during this period. Here we present a 37.6 m high-resolution Sanmen lacustrine sequences during the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition period that indicates the astronomically controlling East Asian climate transition and the Sanmen paloelake evolution. The Rb/Sr series evolution was divided into two parts for astronomical analysis based on the obvious changes observed in curve shape and Evolutionary spectral analysis through the section: 7.4-19 and 19-45 m. Based on evaluation of average accumulation rates from paleomagnetic results, the dominated ~99-cm cycles in the 7.4 to 19 m intervals represent ~41 kyr obliquity cycles. The 19 to 45 m intervals show obvious cycles at ~232-cm, interpreting as ~100 kyr eccentricity. Astronomical tuning combined with paleomagnetic results has been used to establish the 3.83-2.32 Ma high-precision astronomical scale. Rb/Sr series reveals that ~100 kyr eccentricity was the dominant control on lake expansion for Sanmen paleolake evolutionary before 2.75 Ma, after that, dominant obliquity control. Based on re-established the meridional sea surface temperature (SST) gradient between polar Atlantic borehole ODP 982 and the equatorial Atlantic borehole ODP 662, results show that the meridional sea surface temperature gradients increased significantly at 2.75 Ma, with cyclicity changing from the dominant ~140 kyr and ~95 kyr cycles to ~41 kyr at 2.75 Ma, and is coeval with our Rb/Sr record in the Weihe Basin. Crossspectral analysis show that the Rb/Sr and meridional SST gradient are strongly coherent and almost in-phase at these primary orbital periods in the past between 3.83-2.32 Ma. Thus, we conclude that the reorganization of the East Asian climate system at ~2.75 Ma, which coincided with the expansion of Arctic ice sheet, was a response to a dramatic cooling of the global climate and obliquity-driven changes in meridional SST gradients.

How to cite: Zhang, Z., Wang, Z., and Huang, C.: Orbital-scale climatic record in the North China across the Pliocene-Pleistocene transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2697, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2697, 2021.

Glacial cycles are driven by cyclical changes in Earth’s three orbital parameters: obliquity, precession, and eccentricity.  A common interpretation of Milankovitch’s orbital theory suggests that June insolation at 65°N is the dominant forcing in driving glacial cycles. This places emphasis on precession which has the greatest effect on June insolation at 65°N. However, there is abundant evidence for the importance of obliquity in driving glacial cycles. We compare the relative strengths of obliquity and precession on climate to further explore the possibility that obliquity could be more important than common interpretations of Milankovitch’s orbital theory would suggest. We use a set of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model simulations to produce time series of key climate variables. Such variables include snowfall and positive degree-days (the sum of mean daily temperature for all days above 0°C), which are proxies for accumulation and ablation, respectively. We focus our analysis on glacial inception in Scandinavia and Baffin Island, the locations where the Scandinavian and Laurentide ice sheets were initiated. We show that obliquity causes changes in positive degree-days of larger magnitude than those of precession in both Scandinavia and Baffin Island. Snowfall is dominated by obliquity in Scandinavia and by precession in Baffin Island. The location dependence of the importance of obliquity and precession may have implications for deglaciation which occurred at lower latitudes than the inception locations. Additionally, our positive degree-day time series were most closely represented by Milankovitch’s caloric summer insolation metric than June insolation at 65°N.

How to cite: ONeill, G. and Broccoli, A.: Examining the relative effects of obliquity and precession on variables important for glacial inception in Scandinavia and Baffin Island using linear reconstructions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3159, 2021.

EGU21-3696 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Orbital pacing of redox cycles suggested by red bed color of the Late Triassic Chinle Formation, Arizona

Christopher Lepre, Owen Yazzie, and Paul Olsen

Late Triassic records of the orbital pacing of climate are well documented from the stratigraphy of lake basins and marine facies. However, fewer studies have focused on detecting orbital climate signals preserved by fluvial depositional environments, home to terrestrial life. The sedimentary Chinle Formation of the Colorado Plateau (southwestern USA) is a succession of Late Triassic largely red beds that preserves numerous vertebrate fossils, including evidence of the Adamanian–Revueltian tetrapod faunal transition. Floodplain mudstones showing pedogenic features alternate on various thickness scales with channel sandstones. We assessed the cyclostratigraphy of red bed color for a ~250-m-thick interval of the Chinle Formation dated to 209-216 Ma using a scientific drill core from the Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona, 1A. Diffuse reflectance spectroscopy demonstrates that red bed color in this core derives from the mineral hematite, probably formed in response to the wetting and drying of soils under monsoonal rainfall. The magnetochronology and high-precision U-Pb detrital zircon dates of the core, and the astrochronostratigraphic polarity time scale of the Newark-Hartford basins are used to provide an age model for our spectral analyses and cyclostratigraphy. From the red-green and yellow-blue time series, we identified evidence of the long eccentricity, Jupiter-Venus cycle (405 kyr), longer-period grand eccentricity cycles including the Mars-Earth cycle, and possibly the Mars-Earth inclination cycle. There are also hints at higher frequency cycles. Although the relative amount of 405 kyr power is a fraction of the total variability, there is significant coherence between the Newark Basin depth rank record and the Chinle color at the 405 kyr and the ~100 kyr cycles. Our findings support previous interpretations that color and hematite variations formed during the Late Triassic and are unrelated to a younger diagenetic component of the red beds. Fluvial accumulation of the Chinle sediments was not as discontinuous as other studies have suggested, allowing for a reconstruction of orbital climate changes that may have affected the development of terrestrial ecosystems in Western Equatorial Pangaea.

How to cite: Lepre, C., Yazzie, O., and Olsen, P.: Orbital pacing of redox cycles suggested by red bed color of the Late Triassic Chinle Formation, Arizona, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3696, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3696, 2021.

EGU21-4093 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

Transient Climate Simulations of Orbital Effects on Mesozoic Climates

Jan Landwehrs, Georg Feulner, Matteo Willeit, Benjamin Sames, and Michael Wagreich

The Mesozoic era (~252—66 Ma) is traditionally considered as a prolonged greenhouse period, witnessing the breakup of the Pangaean supercontinent. Orbital cycles have, for example, been invoked as drivers of e.g. Pangaean „Megamonsoon“ variability and eustatic sea level cycles in the Mesozoic.

We aim to contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of orbital effects on Mesozoic climates by employing the newly developed CLIMBER-X Earth System Model. Here, we primarily use its coupled atmosphere, ocean, sea ice and vegetation modules, but also include preliminary tests with dynamic carbon cycle and ice-sheets. We present first results from a set of transient climate simulations of four Mesozoic timeslices representative for Triassic, Jurassic, Early Cretaceous and Late Cretaceous boundary conditions (e.g. paleogeography and solar luminosity). The simulations each cover ~100,000 years and are driven by changing precession, obliquity, and eccentricity.

We would like to use the opportunity to discuss this approach and associated questions with the community. For example: Would changing paleogeography and climate background state have modified the response to orbital forcings? Could eustatic sea level cycles have been caused by orbitally-driven redistribution of water between the ocean and land water storages or should orbitally-forced ice sheets also have played a role in the alleged Mesozoic greenhouse? Which connections can be established to proxy records?

How to cite: Landwehrs, J., Feulner, G., Willeit, M., Sames, B., and Wagreich, M.: Transient Climate Simulations of Orbital Effects on Mesozoic Climates, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4093, 2021.

EGU21-4242 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Mineral dust coupled with climate-carbon cycle on orbital timescales over the past 4 Ma

Mengmeng Cao, Zhixiang Wang, Ze Zhang, and Anguo Xiao

Mineral dust is one of the environmental component for forcing the global climatic change, and not only influences the amount of solar radiation incoming the earth surface, but affects atmospheric CO2 concentrations in the past through wind transport to ocean and subsequent biological pumping. Mineral dust is one of the important driving factors for variations of atmospheric CO2 content in Quaternary glacial-interglacial cycles. Here, we reconstruct the interaction between the Asian dust flux (as a representative of the global dust flux), the cryosphere system (δ18Obenthic), and the global carbon cycle since 4 Ma using phase analysis, power decomposition analysis, obliquity sensitivity calculation and evolutionary spectral analysis. The evolutionary spectra show that orbital-scale variability of mineral dust, δ18Obenthic and δ13Cbenthic are very similar over the past 4 Ma, except the interval time of 3-2 Ma that shows higher obliquity energy (higher O/T values) of the δ18Obenthic and δ13Cbenthic data. Therefore, we suggest that the Asian and/or global dust is acted as a transmitter transporting the periodic signals stored in the Arctic ice sheet to deep-sea δ13Cbenthic. This is why δ13Cbenthic data have very similar changes with the Arctic ice sheets on the orbital scale. Sharp increase of global dust flux after 1.6 Ma resulted in a significant weakening of the 405 kyr long eccentricity power of δ13Cbenthic series because Arctic ice sheet signals strongly inhibit the influences of low-latitude solar insolation variations on deep-sea δ13Cbenthic system. In addition, we suggest that strengthened global drought and increases of dust fluxes since late Miocene probably forced the anti-phase relationship between δ18Obenthic and δ13Cbenthic around 6 Ma, rather than the expansion of Arctic ice sheet. Our results highlight the close coupling between dust fluxes and the global carbon cycle, with deeply influencing marine productivity and land surface processes.

Keywords: mineral dust; deep sea oxygen isotope (δ18Obenthic ); deep sea carbon isotope(δ13Cbenthic); orbital  periods ; inland Asia

How to cite: Cao, M., Wang, Z., Zhang, Z., and Xiao, A.: Mineral dust coupled with climate-carbon cycle on orbital timescales over the past 4 Ma, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4242, 2021.

EGU21-6117 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Glacial-driven sea-level changes in the Late Triassic

Meng Wang, Mingsong Li, David B. Kemp, and Slah Boulila

Projecting future anthropogenic sea-level rise requires a comprehensive understanding of the mechanistic links between climate and short-term sea-level changes under a warming climate. Two different hypotheses, glacioeustasy and groundwater aquifer eustasy, have been proposed to explain short-term, high amplitude sea-level oscillations during past greenhouse intervals. However, the aquifer eustasy hypothesis – supported by subjective evidence of sequence stratigraphy in the Late Triassic greenhouse, has never been rigorously tested. Here we test these competing hypotheses using a recently proposed, objective approach of sedimentary noise modeling for both sea- and lake-level reconstructions for the first time. Sedimentation rate estimates and astronomical calibration of multiple paleoclimate proxies from the lacustrine Newark Basin and the marine Austrian Alps enable the construction of a highly resolved astronomical time scale for the Late Triassic. Using this timescale, sedimentary noise modeling for both lacustrine and marine successions is carried out through the Late Triassic. Lake level fluctuations reconstructed by sedimentary noise modeling and principal component analysis revealed that million-year scale lake-level variations were linked to astronomical forcing with periods of ~3.3 Myr, ~1.8 Myr, and ~1.2 Myr. Our objective water-depth reconstructions demonstrate that lake-level variations in the Newark Basin correlate with sea-level changes in the Austrian Alps, rejecting the aquifer eustasy hypothesis and supporting glacioeustasy as the sea-level driver for the Late Triassic. This study thus emphasizes the importance of high-resolution, objective reconstruction of sea- and lake-levels and supports the hypothesis that fluctuations in continental ice mass drove sea-level changes during the Late Triassic greenhouse.

How to cite: Wang, M., Li, M., Kemp, D. B., and Boulila, S.: Glacial-driven sea-level changes in the Late Triassic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6117, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6117, 2021.

EGU21-6638 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Strong inclination pacing of climate in Late Triassic low latitudes revealed by the Earth-Saturn tilt cycle

Miranda Margulis-Ohnuma, Jessica Whiteside, and Paul Olsen

Gravitational interactions among masses in the solar system are recorded in Earth’s paleoclimate history because variations in the geometry of Earth’s orbit and axial orientation modulate solar insolation. However, astronomical models prior to ca. 60 Ma are unreliable due to the unpredictable nature of orbital chaos in the solar system, and therefore such models must be constrained using geological data. Here, we use natural gamma radioactivity and other environmental proxies from paleo-tropical Late Triassic lake deposits of the Newark Rift Basin of eastern North America, previously shown to be paced by variations in axial precession and orbital eccentricity and stratigraphically constrained by U-Pb dating, to explore hitherto undescribed strong variations in orbital inclination in the 201–206 Ma interval (lacustrine, upper Passaic Formation), where lake level variations are particularly muted. We identify the Earth-Saturn 173 kyr orbital inclination cycle and use it to tune the sequence because it exhibits high theoretical stability and metronomic behavior due to the very large mass of Saturn. We tune separately to long-eccentricity as well, with similar effect. Slight, complimentary offsets in the other inclination and eccentricity periods revealed by the Earth-Saturn (s3-s6) and Venus-Jupiter (g2-g5) tunings are apparent that may be due to chaotic variations of the secular fundamental frequencies in the nodal and perihelion orbital precessions of Earth and Venus, respectively. The surprising strength of the inclination cycles in this specific sequence suggest an additional modulating effect of the Earth System on expression of the components of orbital pacing of climate, as well a mechanism to more fully constrain the secular fundamental frequencies of the solar system beyond the ca. 60 Myr limit of predictability that chaos imposes on astronomical solutions.

How to cite: Margulis-Ohnuma, M., Whiteside, J., and Olsen, P.: Strong inclination pacing of climate in Late Triassic low latitudes revealed by the Earth-Saturn tilt cycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6638, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6638, 2021.

EGU21-7746 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Modulated orbital cycles in planktonic foraminifera δ18O

Pepijn Bakker, Auk de Haas, Brett Metcalfe, and Didier Roche

Measurements of δ18O on planktonic foraminifera represent an important geological archive. In the study of climate change on orbital time-scales, δ18O is used either as a proxy for temperature change, to construct age models through pattern matching, to deduce the drivers of climate change by looking at frequency power spectra or all of the above. The validity of these approaches hinges on a two-step assumption, namely that the signal of the orbital cycles is transferred unaltered from 1) solar radiation that reaches the top of the atmosphere, insolation, to the sea surface, and 2) from the sea surface translated into the δ18O composition of the foraminiferal shell. The complexity of these two steps make it difficult to validate the assumptions behind these major paleoclimatological approaches. In this research we aim to disentangle the problem, here focussing only on the latter part: how do species-specific living habitats of foraminifera in the water column and throughout the year shape the δ18O response were the Earth’s surfce climate to perfectly reflect the orbital forcing(s). To this end we combine an isotope-enabled climate model (iLOVECLIM) with a foraminifera growth model and investigate the response of δ18O from three species of foraminifera (Globigerinoides ruber, Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, and Globigerina bulloides) to obliquity and precessional cycles.

Our results show that the planktonic foraminifera δ18O response to astronomical forcings is dominated by annual mean changes in sea-surface temperature, thus corroborating a key assumption underlying many geological climate reconstructions. However, in various places changes in the depth habitat, temperature-dependent growth rates, seasonality and δ18O of the sea water dominate the foraminifera δ18O signal. Because of these modulations, planktonic foraminifera δ18O time series can have very different characteristics compared to the orbital forcings, including limited spatial coherence as well as limited inter-species coherence at a single location.

How to cite: Bakker, P., de Haas, A., Metcalfe, B., and Roche, D.: Modulated orbital cycles in planktonic foraminifera δ18O, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7746, 2021.

EGU21-9782 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

Astrochronology for the oldest Cambrian trilobites in Moroccan West Gondwana

Matthias Sinnesael, Andrew R. Millard, and Martin R. Smith

The lower Cambrian successions of Southern Morocco (West Gondwana) feature some of the oldest trilobites and archaeocyaths fossil remains in the world, as well as some of the largest carbon isotope excursions of the Phanerozoic. Combined with multiple state-of-the-art U-Pb radio-isotopic constraints, these sections are key references for lower Cambrian stratigraphy. We suggest that some of the regularly alternating lithological sequences, which show various orders of nested cyclicity, carry a signal of astronomical climate forcing. In agreement with a U-Pb Bayesian age model, the primary lithological alternation corresponds with the precession astronomical cycle while clear amplitude modulation patterns reflect a short-term eccentricity imprint. Both small- and large-scale features are laterally continuous at great distances. Changes in lithology may have been primary controlled by changes in terrigenous input. This integrated astrochronological age model has the potential to result in unprecedented early Cambrian timescales for major paleoenvironmental changes like the appearance of key fossils and large carbon isotope excursions. Often, lower Cambrian and Precambrian strata lack classical stratigraphical tools like good index fossils or magnetostratigraphy. In comparison with younger strata, the combined use of high-quality radio-isotopic dating and high-precision astrochronology might be even more crucial to disentangle important events in the early evolution of life and climate on our planet.

How to cite: Sinnesael, M., Millard, A. R., and Smith, M. R.: Astrochronology for the oldest Cambrian trilobites in Moroccan West Gondwana, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9782, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9782, 2021.

EGU21-10071 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Long-term, sustained reduction in ocean productivity initiated at 4.6-4.4 Ma

Boris Theofanis Karatsolis, Bryan Lougheed, David De Vleeschouwer, and Jorijntje Henderiks

The late Miocene to early Pliocene was a time of global cooling, albeit in a warmer-than present climate state. Increased marine primary productivity characterizes this interval, often referred to as the late Miocene-early Pliocene biogenic bloom (~9-3.5 Ma). To explain its manifestation, paleoceanographers often involve ocean gateway or monsoon-related mechanisms, formulating hypotheses of increased or redistributed nutrients in the ocean. However, the exact cause-and-effect chains remain obscure, since important diachronicity is observed across ocean basins for the main phase and the termination of this event. Here, we compile proxy data for late Miocene to Pliocene paleoproductivity from all major ocean basins, including calcareous and siliceous plankton groups. By systematically evaluating the age-depth model accuracies of previously published records we demonstrate that a globally synchronous and long-sustained reduction in primary productivity was initiated with a sharp decline between 4.6 and 4.4 Ma. Our compilation supports that relatively rapid processes (~200 kyr) influenced nutrient availability towards the end of the biogenic bloom. By evaluating different mechanisms influencing the ocean nutrient budget on such time scales, we propose orbital forcing as an important candidate to have tipped the balance towards a less productive ocean. We show that this decline in productivity coincided with a prolonged period of low orbital eccentricity and a shift towards lower-amplitude obliquity. This specific astronomical configuration prevents the development of extreme seasonal contrasts which could lead to reduced nutrient supply to the ocean due to decreased riverine influx.

How to cite: Karatsolis, B. T., Lougheed, B., De Vleeschouwer, D., and Henderiks, J.: Long-term, sustained reduction in ocean productivity initiated at 4.6-4.4 Ma, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10071, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10071, 2021.

EGU21-10245 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

Orbital cycle-related benthic-pelagic fluctuations in Foraminifera during the last glacial-interglacial interval in the western South Atlantic

Jaime Yesid Suarez Ibarra, Cristiane Fraga Frozza, Sandro Monticelli Petró, Pamela de Lara Palhano, and Maria Alejandra Gómez Pivel

Paleoceanographic studies reconstructing surface paleoproductivity and benthic conditions allow us to measure the effectiveness of the biological pump, an important mechanism in the global climate system. In order to assess surface productivity changes and their effect on the sea-floor environment, a multiproxy paleoceanographic analysis was conducted on the core SAT-048A (1542 m.b.s.l.), recovered from the continental slope of the southernmost Brazilian continental margin, western South Atlantic. We assessed sea surface productivity using different planktonic foraminiferal proxies: (1) the relative abundances of the species Globigerina bulloides and Globigerinita glutinata and (2) the δ13C signal of shells of the species Globigerinoides ruber ruber. To assess the organic matter (OM) flux to the seafloor, the foraminiferal planktonic:benthic ratio and the δ13C signal of shells of the benthic foraminifer Uvigerina spp. were used. To study dissolution effects occurring at the sea-floor, the Fragmentation Intensity (i.e., the proportion of fragments and broken foraminiferal shells), the number of planktonic foraminiferal tests per gram of dry sediment, and the CaCO3 and Sand contents of the sediment were measured. Superimposed on the climate-induced changes related to the last glacial-interglacial transition, the reconstruction indicates paleoproductivity changes synchronized with the precessional cycle. From the reconstructed data, it was possible to identify the glacial and postglacial stages: surface productivity, flux to the seafloor, and dissolution rates of planktonic foraminiferal tests where high during the glacial and low during the postglacial. Furthermore, within the glacial, enhanced productivity was associated with higher insolation values, which can be explained by increased NE summer winds that strengthened the Brazil Current transport and, in turn, promoted meandering and upwelling of the nutrient rich South Atlantic Central Water. Changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and the reorganization of bottom water masses may change the CO32- saturation levels and, consequently, influence carbonate preservation. However, the δ13C values from shells of Uvigerina spp. are different from present-day δ13C values from dissolved inorganic carbon for the Upper Circumpolar Deep Water and the North Atlantic Deep Water, which is likely linked to varying OM fluxes. Future studies (e.g., εNd in benthic Foraminifera) must quantify the effect of the reorganization of the bottom water masses on the dissolution of the planktonic foraminiferal tests, to better understand the effect of the biological pump removing carbon from the seawater and its subsequent sequestration in the seafloor sediments.

How to cite: Suarez Ibarra, J. Y., Fraga Frozza, C., Monticelli Petró, S., de Lara Palhano, P., and Gómez Pivel, M. A.: Orbital cycle-related benthic-pelagic fluctuations in Foraminifera during the last glacial-interglacial interval in the western South Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10245, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10245, 2021.

EGU21-11364 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8

An attempt to understand δ13C cycles with a simple conceptual model.

Gaelle Leloup and Didier Paillard

A correct understanding of the human perturbation on the carbon cycle is a fundamental prerequisite of future climate modelling on large timescales.

However, « classical » carbon cycle theories barely take into account the « organic » part of the carbon cycle and are not able to reproduce past δ13C data.

Analysis of sediment data reveals the presence of cycles in the δ13C record. A 400 kyr cycle has been observed at several time periods, from the Eocene to present [1-4]. Moreover, longer cycles have been observed : 2.4, 4.6 and 9 Myr [5-8]. The 9 Myr cycle is present since the start of the Mesozoic. These periodicities seem linked to eccentricity periods.

By forcing astronomically the (net) organic matter burial in a carbon cycle conceptual model, Paillard [9] reproduced 400 kyr and 2.4 Myr cycles in δ13C.

The net organic matter burial has a key role on δ13C, as terrestrial and marine biology preferentially use 12C during photosynthesis. Therefore if the burial of (12C rich) organic matter is relatively more important, the δ13C of the superficial system will decrease, and inversely.

However, this conceptual model was not able to explain longer term cycles at 4.6 and 9 Myr.

Here, we develop a new conceptual model based on Paillard [9], which includes the role of oxygen. Indeed, oxygen also influences the organic matter burial.

With this new conceptual model coupling carbon and oxygen cycle, it is possible to obtain 400 kyr, 2.4 Myr, but also longer cycles.

 

References :

[1] Sexton et al, 2011, Eocene global warming events driven by ventilation of oceanic dissolved organic carbon

[2] Pälike et al, 2006 The Heartbeat of the Oligocene Climate System

[3] Billups et al, 2004 Astronomic calibration of the late Oligocene through early Miocene geomagnetic polarity time scale

[4]Wang et al, 2010, Obscuring of long eccentricity cyclicity in Pleistocene oceanic carbon isotope records

[5] Boulila et al, 2012, A ~9 myr cycle in Cenozoic δ13C record and long-term orbital eccentricity modulation: Is there a link?

[6] Ikeda et al, 2014, 70 million year astronomical time scale for the deep-sea bedded chert sequence (Inuyama, Japan): Implications for Triassic–Jurassic geochronology.

[7] Martinez et al, 2015, Orbital pacing of carbon fluxes by a ∼9-My eccentricity cycle during the Mesozoic

[8] Sprovieri M, et al. (2013) Late Cretaceous orbitally-paced carbon isotope stratigraphy from the Bottaccione Gorge (Italy).

[9] Paillard, 2017, The Plio-Pleistocene climatic evolution as a consequence of orbital forcing on the carbon cycle.

How to cite: Leloup, G. and Paillard, D.: An attempt to understand δ13C cycles with a simple conceptual model., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11364, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11364, 2021.

EGU21-13809 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

Astronomically paced marine biological evolution during the Late Paleozoic icehouse-to-greenhouse transition

Qiang Fang, Huaichun Wu, Shuzhong Shen, Junxuan Fan, Linda Hinnov, Shihong Zhang, and Tianshui Yang

Late Paleozoic deglaciation is the Earth’s first icehouse-to-greenhouse transition in a vegetated world, but the climatic and biological responses to this transition have not yet been fully addressed. We conducted cyclostratigraphic analysis on the magnetic susceptibility from a deep marine carbonate succession in South China, to reconstruct the astrochronology of the late Early Permian, and to decipher evolutionary responses to astronomically forced climate changes in a marine diversity time series. Our results indicates that the minima of ~1.8 m.y. short orbital eccentricity amplitude modulation cycles led to seasonally stable precipitation patterns and a constant input of nutrients, which spurred marine biodiversity during this deglaciation. Synchronizing global biotic and abiotic records reveals that peaks of marine biodiversity occurred during nodes of ~1.3 m.y. obliquity amplitude modulation cycles, when ice sheet expansion triggered enhanced precipitation and organic carbon burial during icehouse conditions (290−285.1 Ma). Starting at 285.1 Ma, the insolation-biodiversity relationship began to change, paced by glacial termination and tropical aridification. With the transition to greenhouse conditions (~279.1−272 Ma), obliquity nodes became associated instead with terrestrial aridity and marine anoxia, and suppression of marine speciation. Our results bring into focus a pattern of shifting dynamics involving Earth’s astronomical parameters, climate change and marine biodiversity for icehouse and greenhouse worlds in the late Paleozoic Era.

How to cite: Fang, Q., Wu, H., Shen, S., Fan, J., Hinnov, L., Zhang, S., and Yang, T.: Astronomically paced marine biological evolution during the Late Paleozoic icehouse-to-greenhouse transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13809, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13809, 2021.

EGU21-15594 | vPICO presentations | CL1.8 | Highlight

Long and short orbital forcing of Jurassic wildfires.

Teuntje P. Hollaar, Sarah B. Baker, Stephen P. Hesselbo, Jean-Francois Deconinck, Luke Mander, Micha Ruhl, and Claire M. Belcher

Fire regimes are changing due to anthropogenic climatic drivers and fuel management challenges in all regions of Earth. However, the planet is also subject to natural background variability due to Earth’s orbital parameters (Milkankovitch cycles). To date no studies have assessed a sedimentary record that is sufficiently long or has a resolution that is high enough to assess both long eccentricity and precessional forcings on fire.  Here we present a ~350,000 yr record of wildfire activity, using fossil charcoal from Jurassic sediments.

The studied interval is part of the astronomically constrained Upper Pliensbachian of the Mochras borehole, Cardigan Bay Basin. The site was located within the Laurasian Seaway, south of the Viking Corridor that linked the north-western Tethys Ocean to the Boreal Sea, at a palaeolatitude of ~35°N. Clear lithological couplets of carbonate-rich and TOC-enhanced beds are observed, which show an orbital control on deposition. High resolution macrocharcoal (>125 um) and microcharcoal (10-125 um) abundance data have been obtained at a ~2 ky resolution over the studied interval. Charcoal data are coupled to estimates of variations in the hydrological cycle using clay mineral analyses, along with palynofacies and elemental analyses, and lithological and biogeochemical signatures.

We show that fire activity was strongly increased during (1) a period of maximum eccentricity (405,000 yr cycle) and (2) inferred maximum in seasonal contrast due to precession (20,000 yr cycles). In these periods with a strong seasonality, charcoal abundance indicates enhanced wildfire activity. This is coupled to a more seasonal pattern of rainfall as indicated by the relative abundance of smectite versus kaolinite. We argue that the shift to a more seasonal climate would have led to the increase in dry-adapted conifer forests. Conifers have biochemical and morphological traits that make them particularly flammable whether dry or live.This climate induced change in vegetation contributed to increased wildfire activity in the seasonal dry periods.

Increase in wildfire activity on an orbital time scale indicates that currently wildfires should be suppressed as Earth is close to an eccentricity minimum, such that man may have counteracted a relatively fire limited period.

How to cite: Hollaar, T. P., Baker, S. B., Hesselbo, S. P., Deconinck, J.-F., Mander, L., Ruhl, M., and Belcher, C. M.: Long and short orbital forcing of Jurassic wildfires., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15594, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15594, 2021.

CL1.9 – Glacial/Interglacial variability over the last 1.5 Myr.

EGU21-7850 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Sequence of events at high resolution during deglaciations over the last 800ka from the EDC ice core

Antoine Grisart, amaelle landais, barbara stenni, ilaria crotti, valérie masson delmotte, jean jouzel, fredéric prié, roxanne jacob, and elise fourré

The EPICA Dome C (EDC) ice core has been drilled from 1996 to 2004. Its study revealed a unique 800 ka long continuous climatic record including 9 deglaciations. Ice cores contain numerous proxies in the ice and in the air trapped in bubbles (chronological constraints, greenhouse gases concentration, local temperature proxies, mid to low latitude climate proxies). Here, we focus on information provided by the isotopic (and elemental) composition of water and oxygen archived in both ice and gas matrix. On one hand, the water isotopic composition brings information on past temperatures and water cycle re-organizations:   d18O or dD records past temperature, whereas the combination of d18O with dD or d17O provide information on the past water cycle organization through d-excess and 17O-excess linked to climatic conditions of the evaporative regions. On the other hand, the elemental composition of oxygen expressed in the O2/N2 ratio provides key information for orbital dating over the last 800 ka in complement with the isotopic composition of atmospheric oxygen (d18O of O2 or d18Oatm) which is related as well to the low latitude water cycle.

In this study, we present new high resolution records of water isotopes (d18O, d-excess and 17O-excess) as well as high resolution measurements of O2/N2 and d18Oatm over the last 9 deglaciations on the EDC ice core. We first use the high resolution records of O2/N2 and d18Oatm to improve absolute dating constrain over the glacial terminations and discuss the link between orbital forcing and climate variations recorded in the EDC ice core. In a second part, we use d-excess, 17O-excess and d18Oatm to constrain the relative chronology of high vs low latitude climatic events at sub-millennial scale over past deglaciations.

How to cite: Grisart, A., landais, A., stenni, B., crotti, I., masson delmotte, V., jouzel, J., prié, F., jacob, R., and fourré, E.: Sequence of events at high resolution during deglaciations over the last 800ka from the EDC ice core, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7850, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7850, 2021.

EGU21-7899 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Sea surface temperatures, salinity and pH reconstructions over the last 1,2 Ma in South Indian Ocean using the unique combination of Mg/Ca, d18O and ∆47 in planktonic foraminifera

Marion Peral, Thibaut Caley, Bruno Malaizé, Erin McClymont, Thomas Extier, Gulay Isguder, Dominique Blamart, Franck Bassinot, and Mathieu Daeron

The Mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) took place between 1,200 Ma and 800 ka (still debated). During this transition, the Earth’s orbitally paced ice age cycles intensified, lengthened from ∼40 000 (∼40 ky) to ∼100 ky, and became distinctly asymmetrical while Earth’s orbital variations remained unchanged. Although orbital variations constitute the first order forcing on glacial-interglacial oscillations of the late Quaternary, they cannot explain alone the shifts in climatic periodicity and amplitude observed during the MPT. In order to explain the MPT, long-term evolution of internal mechanisms and feedbacks have been called upon, in relation with the global cooling trend initiated during the Cenozoic, the expansion of Antarctic and Greenland Ice Sheet and/or the long-term decline in greenhouse gases (particularly CO2). A key point is therefore to accurately reconstruction of oceanic temperatures to decipher the processes driving climate variations.

In the present work, we studied the marine sediment core MD96-2048 taken from south Indian Ocean (26*10’482’’ S, 34*01’148’’ E) in the region of the Agulhas current. We compared 5 paleothermometers: alkenone, TEX86, foraminiferal- transfer function, Mg/Ca and clumped isotope. Among these approaches, carbonate clumped-isotope thermometry (∆47) only depends on crystallization temperature, and the ∆47 relationship with planktonic foraminifer calcification temperature is well defined. Since Mg/Ca is not only controlled by temperature but is also affected by salinity and pH. The classical d18O in planktic is dependent on SST and d18Osw, which is regionally correlated with the salinity in the present-day ocean. Assuming that the present-day d18Osw-salinity relation was the same during the MPT, we are able to separate changes in d18Osw from temperature effects and reconstruct past salinity. Combining d18O, Mg/Ca and ∆47 on planktonic foraminifera allow in theory to reconstruct SST, SSS and pH.

Here, we measured d18O, Mg/Ca and ∆47 on the shallow-dwelling planktonic species Globigerinioides ruber ss. at the maximal of glacial and interglacial periods over the last 1.2 Ma. Our set of data makes it possible to estimate the long-term evolution of SST, salinity and pH (and thus have an insight into the atmospheric CO2 concentration) across the MPT. Frist, strong differences are observed between the 5 derived-SST: the alkenone and TEX86 recorded the higher temperatures than the other SST proxies. Alkenone derived-SST do not show glacial-interglacial variations within the MPT. The Mg/Ca and transfer function derived-SST show a good agreement each other, while the clumped-isotope derived-SST are systematically colder than the other derived-SST. Then, our ∆47-SST, salinity and pH results clearly show that amplitude of glacial-interglacial variations was insignificant between 1.2 and 0.8 Ma (within the MPT) and increased after the MPT. Finally, we also discussed the potential to use this unique combination of proxies to reconstruct changes of atmospheric CO2 concentration.

How to cite: Peral, M., Caley, T., Malaizé, B., McClymont, E., Extier, T., Isguder, G., Blamart, D., Bassinot, F., and Daeron, M.: Sea surface temperatures, salinity and pH reconstructions over the last 1,2 Ma in South Indian Ocean using the unique combination of Mg/Ca, d18O and ∆47 in planktonic foraminifera, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7899, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7899, 2021.

EGU21-12463 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Equatorial Pacific bulk 𝛿15N supports a secular increase in subantarctic zone nitrate utilization after the mid-Pleistocene Transition

Jonathan Lambert, Kelly Gibson, Braddock Linsley, Samantha Bova, Yair Rosenthal, and Mina Surprenant

Pacific-wide measurements of nitrate and its isotopic composition have furthered our understanding of modern subsurface circulation and have revealed basin-scale connections between oceanographic and nitrogen cycle processes. From the Eastern Tropical Pacific (ETP), the isotopic signature of denitrification is spread zonally and meridionally via subsurface currents. From the Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean, Subantarctic Mode Water (SAMW) penetrates to the low latitudes, delivering nitrate (and likely its isotopic signature) to equatorial surface waters via upwelling. These two regional processes combine to inform much of the thermocline nitrogen dynamics of the Pacific. Here, we compare a new 1.4-Myr bulk sediment

How to cite: Lambert, J., Gibson, K., Linsley, B., Bova, S., Rosenthal, Y., and Surprenant, M.: Equatorial Pacific bulk 𝛿15N supports a secular increase in subantarctic zone nitrate utilization after the mid-Pleistocene Transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12463, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12463, 2021.

Foregoing studies have found that sea-level transitioned to becoming approximately twice as sensitive to CO2 radiative forcing between the early and late Pleistocene (Chalk et al., 2017; Dyez et al., 2018). In this study we analyze the relationships among sea-level, orbital variations, and CO2 observations in a time-dependent, zonally-averaged energy balance model having a simple ice sheet. Probability distributions for model parameters are inferred using a hierarchical Bayesian method representing model and data uncertainties, including those arising from uncertain geological age models. We find that well-established nonlinearities in the climate system can explain sea-level becoming 2.5x (2.1x - 4.5x) more sensitive to radiative forcing between 2 and 0 Ma. Denial-of-mechanism experiments show that the increase in sensitivity is diminished by 36% (31% - 39%) if omitting geometric effects associated with thickening of a larger ice sheet, by 81% (73% - 92%) if omitting the ice-albedo feedback, and by more than 96% (93% - 98%) if omitting both. We also show that prescribing a fixed sea-level age model leads to different inferences of ice-sheet dimension, planetary albedo, and lags in the response to radiative forcing than if using a more complete approach in which sea-level ages are jointly inferred with model physics. Consistency of the model ice-sheet with geologic constraints on the southern terminus of the Laurentide ice sheet can be obtained by prescribing lower basal shear stress during the early Pleistocene, but such more-expansive ice sheets imply lower CO2 levels than would an ice-sheet having the same aspect ratio as in the late Pleistocene, exacerbating disagreements with 𝛿11B-derived CO2 estimates. These results raise a number of possibilities, including that (1) geologic evidence for expansive early-Pleistocene ice sheets represents only intermittent and spatially-limited ice-margin advances, (2) 𝛿11B-derived CO2 reconstructions are biased high, or (3) that another component of the global energy balance system, such as the average ice albedo or a process not included in our model, also changed through the middle Pleistocene. Future work will seek to better constrain early-Pleistocene CO2 levels by way of a more complete incorporation of proxy uncertainties and biases into the Bayesian analysis.

How to cite: Liautaud, P. and Huybers, P.: Bayesian analysis of sea-level sensitivity to CO2 forcing across the mid-Pleistocene transition: possible implications for early-Pleistocene ice-sheet extent, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3335, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3335, 2021.

EGU21-3630 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Emergence of critical climate states during the Pleistocene

Nicholas Golledge

During the Pleistocene (approximately 2.6 Ma to present) glacial to interglacial climate variability evolved from dominantly 40 kyr cyclicity (Early Pleistocene) to 100 kyr cyclicity (Late Pleistocene to present). Three aspects of this period remain poorly understood: Why did the dominant frequency of climate oscillation change, given that no major changes in orbital forcing occurred? Why are the longer glacial cycles of the Late Pleistocene characterised by a more asymmetric form with abrupt terminations? And how can the Late Pleistocene climate be controlled by 100 kyr cyclicity when astronomical forcings of this frequency are so much weaker than those operating on shorter periods? Here we show that the decreasing frequency and increasing asymmetry that characterise Late Pleistocene ice age cycles both emerge naturally in dynamical systems in response to increasing system complexity, with collapse events (terminations) occuring only once a critical state has been reached. Using insights from network theory we propose that evolution to a state of criticality involves progressive coupling between climate system 'nodes', which ultimately allows any component of the climate system to trigger a globally synchronous termination. We propose that the climate state is synchronised at the 100 kyr frequency, rather than at shorter periods, because eccentricity-driven insolation variability controls mean temperature change globally, whereas shorter-period astronomical forcings only affect the spatial pattern of thermal forcing and thus do not favour global synchronisation. This dynamical systems framework extends and complements existing theories by accomodating the differing mechanistic interpretations of previous studies without conflict.

How to cite: Golledge, N.: Emergence of critical climate states during the Pleistocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3630, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3630, 2021.

EGU21-14370 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Cancellation of the precessional cycle in δ18O records during the Early Pleistocene

Kerim Nisancioglu, Anne Morée, Tianyi Sun, Eivind Straume, and Geoffrey Gebbie

The dominant pacing of glacial‐interglacial cycles in deep‐ocean δ18O records changed substantially during the Mid‐Pleistocene Transition. The precessional cycle (∼23 ky) is absent during the Early Pleistocene, which we show can be explained by cancellation of the hemispherically anti‐phased precessional cycle in the Early Pleistocene interior ocean. Such cancellation develops due to mixing of North Atlantic and Southern Ocean δ18O signals at depth, and shows characteristic spatial patterns. We explore the cancellation potential for different North Atlantic and Southern Ocean deep‐water source δ18O values using a tracer transport ocean model. Cancellation of precession occurs for all signal strengths and is widespread for a signal strength typical for the Early Pleistocene. Early Pleistocene precessional power is therefore likely incompletely archived in deep‐sea δ18O records, concealing the true periodicity of the glacial cycles in the two hemispheres.

How to cite: Nisancioglu, K., Morée, A., Sun, T., Straume, E., and Gebbie, G.: Cancellation of the precessional cycle in δ18O records during the Early Pleistocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14370, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14370, 2021.

EGU21-13787 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Self-consistency of the regolith hypothesis for the mid-Pleistocene Transition

Matthew Drew and Lev Tarasov

Is the regolith hypothesis consistent with the physics of glacial removal of mechanically weak surface material? 

 

The  mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) from small 40 kyr glacial cycles to large, abruptly terminating 100 kyr ones represents a major climate system reorganization for which a clear understanding is lacking. A leading mechanism for this transition is a stabilization of ice sheets due to a shift to higher friction substrate. The Pleistocene saw the removal of deformable regolith -- laying bare hard higher-friction bedrock that would help preserve regional ice during warm interstadials. This is the regolith hypothesis. 

 

The removal of regolith by Pleistocene ice sheets remains poorly constrained. To date, only models with a forced change in area of regolith cover or 1D flow line models with simplistic sediment transport have been used to probe the role of regolith in the MPT. It is therefore unclear if the appropriate amount of regolith removal can occur within the time-frame of the MPT.

 

To properly test the hypothesis, at least three components are required: capable model, observational constraint, and a probe of uncertainties. A capable model must explicitly represent relevant processes in a fully coupled self-consistent manner. We have therefore configured a state of the art 3D glacial systems model (GSM). The GSM incorporates a state-of-the-art fully coupled sediment production/transport model, subglacial hydrology, visco-elastic glacial isostatic adjustment, 3D thermomechanically coupled hybrid shallow ice/shallow shelf ice dynamics, and internal climate solution from an energy balance model. The model generates sediment by quarrying and abrasion, and both subglacial and englacial sediment transport. The subglacial hydrology model employs a linked-cavity system with a flux based switch to tunnel drainage, giving dynamic effective pressure needed for realistic sediment and sliding processes. The coupled model is driven only by prescribed atmospheric CO2 and orbitally derived insolation.

 

The required observational constraints include present-day regolith distribution and inferred Pleistocene ice volume from proxy records.

 

The final component is  a large ensemble of full Pleistocene simulations that probe both initial regolith distribution uncertainties and model parametric uncertainties. We present the results of such an ensemble, examining both rates of computed regolith removal and changes in ice volume cycling across the MPT interval.

How to cite: Drew, M. and Tarasov, L.: Self-consistency of the regolith hypothesis for the mid-Pleistocene Transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13787, 2021.

EGU21-13981 | vPICO presentations | CL1.9

Requiem for the Regolith Hypothesis: Sea-Level and Temperature Reconstructions Provide a New Template for the Middle Pleistocene Transition

Peter U. Clark, Jeremy Shakun, Yair Rosenthal, Peter Köhler, Dan Schrag, Dave Pollard, Zhengyu Liu, and Pat Bartlein

The Middle Pleistocene Transition (MPT) has been characterized as the transition in temperature and sea level from low-amplitude, 41-kyr variability to high-amplitude, quasi-100-kyr variability in the absence of any orbital forcing between 1.2 and 0.7 Ma. The regolith hypothesis is one of a class of hypotheses developed to explain the MPT in sea level, which has been largely inferred from d18Obenthic records. Here we use a global array of 130 sea-surface temperature (SST) records based on Mg/Ca, alkenone, and faunal proxies to reconstruct global and regional SST change over the last 4.5 Myr. Average global temperature cooled by ~6.5oC since ~3.5 Ma, with the MPT represented by a significant increase in the rate of cooling between ~1.4 and 0.8 Ma, and a change from dominant 41-kyr to dominant quasi-100-kyr frequencies at ~1.2 Ma that are well correlated with CO2 over the last 800 ka (r2=0.6). Temperature terminations after 1.2 Ma correspond to skipped obliquity beats and, for the last 800 ka, large increases in CO2. We use our global SST reconstruction to remove the temperature signal from the Ahn17 d18Obenthic stack to derive d18Oseawater. Accounting for the influence of changing temperature on the isotopic composition of ice sheets, we use the d18Oseawater record to reconstruct global sea level for the last 4.5 Myr. These results suggest sea-level minima equivalent to or lower than the LGM sea-level low stand (130 m) throughout the Pleistocene. Since inception of Northern Hemisphere glaciation ~3 Ma, sea level varied linearly with obliquity until ~1.2 Ma, when sea-level began to vary nonlinearly with obliquity, with the largest terminations occurring at the same time as temperature terminations that correspond to increasing obliquity and CO2. These results suggest that the MPT is largely a temperature phenomenon likely associated with CO2. The regolith hypothesis other hypotheses developed to explain a transition from low- to high-amplitude sea level variability during the MPT are no longer required, with the MPT change in sea-level response to obliquity likely due to modulation by CO2.

How to cite: Clark, P. U., Shakun, J., Rosenthal, Y., Köhler, P., Schrag, D., Pollard, D., Liu, Z., and Bartlein, P.: Requiem for the Regolith Hypothesis: Sea-Level and Temperature Reconstructions Provide a New Template for the Middle Pleistocene Transition, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13981, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13981, 2021.

CL1.13 – Climate Change in the geological record: what can we learn from data and models?

EGU21-220 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Mid-Pliocene warming: reducing discrepancies between geological archives and climate models in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas

Jonathan Hall, Stephen Jones, Tom Dunkley Jones, and James Bendle

The mid-Pliocene Warm Period (mPWP) is the most recent time slice (3.264–3.025 Ma) during which average global surface temperatures were 2–3°C warmer than preindustrial conditions, within the range estimated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) for the end of the 21st Century. Global mPWP sea surface temperature (SST) compilations indicate enhanced warming in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas, with anomalies of >6°C based on alkenone methods (Dowsett et al., 2012). However, this warming far exceeds the more conservative SST estimates (a rise of 2−3°C) predicted by the Pliocene Research, Interpretation and Synoptic Mapping (PRISM) reconstructions and leading climate models (including HadCM3). Here, we present new mid-Pliocene alkenone SST records from four regional drilling sites (IODP Site U1308, DSDP Site 552, ODP Site 642 and ODP Site 907) to further examine the magnitude of warming in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas, and to evaluate regional discrepancies between proxy and model SST estimates. We demonstrate mid-Pliocene SSTs peaked up to 21.5°C and 19.7°C in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas, respectively, consistent with existing studies (Robinson et al., 2008; Robinson, 2009). However, we reveal the majority of these SST estimates are derived from GC injections of relatively low total alkenone concentrations (<50 ng/µl), which are susceptible to warming biases caused by chromatographic irreversible adsorption (Grimalt et al., 2001). We subsequently filtered and applied a mathematical correction to our new data to rectify for these warming biases, which results in a reduction in mPWP SSTs, by up to 3.2°C, across all four sites. The corrected (and cooler) alkenone SST records indicate the magnitude of warming in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas may be significantly less than previously thought, helping to reduce and explain regional discrepancies between proxy- and model-based SST reconstructions.

How to cite: Hall, J., Jones, S., Dunkley Jones, T., and Bendle, J.: Mid-Pliocene warming: reducing discrepancies between geological archives and climate models in the NE Atlantic and Nordic Seas, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-220, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-220, 2021.

EGU21-680 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Decoupled changes in upwelling and acidity in the eastern equatorial Pacific during the Pliocene

Madison Shankle, Natalie Burls, Alexey Fedorov, Matthew Thomas, Donald Penman, Heather Ford, Peter Jacobs, Noah Planavsky, and Pincelli Hull

The Pliocene epoch (5.3-2.6 million years ago) is the last time Earth experienced atmospheric carbon dioxide levels comparable to present day anthropogenic levels. As such, this time interval is a potential analogue for future, warmer Earth system states. One enigmatic feature of Pliocene climate is a reduced east-west sea surface temperature gradient in the equatorial Pacific (indicative of reduced equatorial upwelling) coinciding with enhanced biological productivity in the eastern equatorial Pacific (indicative of enhanced equatorial upwelling).  Here we use boron isotopes to investigate these dynamics and to reconstruct the zonal surface pH gradient across the Pliocene equatorial Pacific. We find a strengthened pH gradient relative to modern (with more acidic conditions in the east than the west) despite a reduced temperature gradient at this time. These findings are in contrast to modern-day dynamics in which temperature and acidity co-vary, such that the reduction of the zonal temperature gradient during an El Niño event is accompanied by reduced acidity (as well as reduced upwelling and productivity) in the eastern equatorial Pacific. We show that this decoupling between changes in the pH and temperature gradients is consistent with biogeochemically enabled model simulations of Pliocene climate containing an active Pacific meridional overturning circulation and a weakly stratified equatorial thermocline. This reorganization of Pacific circulation and the onset of north Pacific deep water formation allows old, acidic, more nutrient-rich waters to reach the eastern equatorial Pacific despite weak wind-driven upwelling rates, accounting for the low pH values we observe there as well as previous evidence of enhanced productivity.

How to cite: Shankle, M., Burls, N., Fedorov, A., Thomas, M., Penman, D., Ford, H., Jacobs, P., Planavsky, N., and Hull, P.: Decoupled changes in upwelling and acidity in the eastern equatorial Pacific during the Pliocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-680, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-680, 2021.

EGU21-4802 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Data-model Comparison for the mid-Pliocene Warm Period

Julia Tindall, Alan Haywood, Ulrich Salzmann, and Aisling Dolan

Modelling results from PlioMIP2 (the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project Phase 2) focussing on MIS KM5c; ~3.205Ma, suggest that global mean surface air temperature was 1.7 – 5.2 °C higher than the preindustrial.  This warming was amplified at the poles and over land.  The results are in reasonable agreement with paleodata over the ocean.   

Over the land the situation is more complicated.  Model and data are in very good agreement at lower latitudes, however at high latitudes an initial data-model comparison shows much warmer mPWP temperatures from data than from models.   

Here we consider possible reasons for this data-model discord at high latitudes.  These include uncertainties in model boundary conditions (such as CO2 and orbital forcing), and whether there are local site-specific conditions which need to be accounted for.  We also show that the seasonal cycle in mPWP temperatures at these high latitude sites has no modern analogue.  This could lead to inaccuracies when comparing model derived mean annual temperatures with quantitative climatic estimates from palaeobotanical data using Nearest Living Relative methods.

How to cite: Tindall, J., Haywood, A., Salzmann, U., and Dolan, A.: Data-model Comparison for the mid-Pliocene Warm Period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4802, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4802, 2021.

EGU21-15056 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Terrestrial Middle Miocene (Δ47) temperature record reveals highly dynamic climate for the Central Europe

Emilija Krsnik, Katharina Methner, Niklas Löffler, Oliver Kempf, Jens Fiebig, and Andreas Mulch

The Miocene experienced both, ice-house periods with continental ice-sheets covering both poles and warm greenhouse conditions with strongly increased global temperature, glacier retreat and sea-level rise. The Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO) is the most pronounced warming event in the last 24 Ma, standing out in a time of protracted cooling. The MMCO is marked by a period of intensive global warming between ca. 17 and 15 Ma. The subsequent Mid-Miocene Climate Transition (MMCT), in contrast, was affected by global temperature decline, growth of Antarctic ice sheets, sea level fall and marine biota overturn.

Miocene climate conditions were intensely studied on both, global and regional scales, based on i.a. marine isotope records and continental paleobotanical and mammalian fossil data sets. Despite the dense data sets continental Miocene temperature evolution still remains unclear owing to a large range of inferred temperatures and/or poor age constraints of the associated records.

Here, we present a long-term terrestrial climate record that covers the time interval between ~20 and ~13 Ma and is based on stable (δ18O) and clumped isotope (Δ47) geochemical data. We apply Δ47 thermometry on terrestrial foreland basin sediments to reconstruct the Middle Miocene continental temperature evolution for central Europe. Pedogenic carbonates from well dated fossil soils from several sites in the Northern Alpine Foreland Basin (Switzerland) reveal warm and stable temperatures for the early Miocene (20 – 19 Ma), followed by overall strongly enhanced variability in temperatures with maximum values attained between ca. 17 and 14 Ma. We observe a highly dynamic transition to cooler climates at the end of the MMCO and a subsequent rapid temperature decline of approximately 20°C after 14 Ma during the MMCT. The highly variable temperature patterns during the cooling period coincide with phases of high seasonality in the precipitation pattern as derived from oxygen isotope compositions of soil water.

How to cite: Krsnik, E., Methner, K., Löffler, N., Kempf, O., Fiebig, J., and Mulch, A.: Terrestrial Middle Miocene (Δ47) temperature record reveals highly dynamic climate for the Central Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15056, 2021.

EGU21-15183 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

The Miocene warmth from the North Sea Basin perspective

Kasia K. Sliwinska, Jørgen Bojesen-Koefoed, Karen Dybkjær, Timothy Herbert, Caroline H. Lear, Erik Skovbjerg Rasmussen, Emil Munck Soltau, Nicolas Rudolph Thibault, and Madeleine L. Vickers

The Miocene climate was dynamic, oscillating between major glaciation events and greenhouse conditions (the so-called Miocene Climatic Optimum or MCO). However, forcing factors responsible for climatic transitions from one state to another are not fully understood, partly because palaeoclimatological records from northern mid to high latitudes are scarce.

To better resolve climatic changes of the Miocene epoch in the northern middle latitudes we studied a unique, nearly complete sedimentary record (Sdr. Vium borehole) spanning the upper Aquitanian to the Tortonian of the North Sea Basin. Newly obtained sea surface temperatures (SSTs) from our Miocene core revealed that the North Sea Basin was up to 20°C warmer than today, reaching the temperature maximum during the worldwide MCO (Herbert et al. 2020). Our high-resolution δ13C, TOC and C/N records, as well as elemental detrital ratios (Si/Al, Zr/Rb, Zr/Al) derived from XRF reveal important changes in the source of organic matter and detrital coarse fraction of the sediment. During the Miocene the location of the Sdr. Vium borehole was situated in a proximal setting, with water depths varying between 0 and ~200 m, partly due to advancing and retreating delta lobes and partly due to relative sea level changes. We observe that the depositional environment had a large impact on our record. By far the most important of these changes is a condensed interval associated with phosphatization, pyritization, and glauconite, associated with a major shift from a dark brown, organic-rich, bioturbated silty clay with thin sand lenses (the Hodde Formation) towards a green and brown clay with high concentrations of green glaucony pellets of fine sand grade (the Ørnhøj Formation). This shift is related to the subsidence of the North Sea Basin and marks the onset of a sediment-starvation in the basin.

How to cite: Sliwinska, K. K., Bojesen-Koefoed, J., Dybkjær, K., Herbert, T., Lear, C. H., Rasmussen, E. S., Soltau, E. M., Thibault, N. R., and Vickers, M. L.: The Miocene warmth from the North Sea Basin perspective, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15183, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15183, 2021.

EGU21-9956 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

A modern prototype three-layer stratification in the Arctic Ocean since the Miocene

Akil Hossain, Gregor Knorr, Wilfried Jokat, and Gerrit Lohmann

The tectonic opening of the Fram Strait (FS) was critical to the water exchange between the Atlantic Ocean and the Arctic Ocean, and caused the transition from a restricted to a ventilated Arctic Ocean during early Miocene. If and how the water exchange between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic influenced the global current system is still disputed. We apply a fully coupled atmosphere-ocean-sea-ice model to investigate stratification and ocean circulation in the Arctic Ocean in response to the opening of the FS during early to middle Miocene. Progressive widening of the FS gateway in our simulation causes a moderate warming, while salinity conditions in the Nordic Seas remain similar. On the contrary, with increasing FS width Arctic temperatures remain unchanged and salinity changes appear to steadily become stronger. For a sill depth of ~1500 m, we achieve ventilation of the Arctic Ocean due to enhanced import of saline Atlantic water through a FS width of ~105 km. Moreover, at this width and depth, we detect a modern-like three-layer stratification in the Arctic Ocean. The exchange flow through FS is characterized by vertical separation of a low salinity cold outflow from the Arctic Ocean confined to a thin upper layer, an intermediate saline inflow from the Atlantic Ocean below and a cold bottom Arctic outflow. Using a significantly shallower and narrower FS during the early Miocene, our study suggests that the ventilation mechanisms and stratification in the Arctic Ocean are comparable to the present-day characteristics.

How to cite: Hossain, A., Knorr, G., Jokat, W., and Lohmann, G.: A modern prototype three-layer stratification in the Arctic Ocean since the Miocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9956, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9956, 2021.

EGU21-1538 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13 | Highlight

West Antarctic archipelago covered by cool-temperate forests during early Oligocene glaciation

Johann Philipp Klages, Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand, Steven M. Bohaty, Ulrich Salzmann, Torsten Bickert, Gerrit Lohmann, Karsten Gohl, Gerhard Kuhn, Jürgen Titschack, Juliane Müller, Thorsten Bauersachs, Thomas Frederichs, Robert D. Larter, Katharina Hochmuth, Werner Ehrmann, Francisco J. Rodríguez Tovar, Gerhard Schmiedl, Tina van de Flierdt, Cornelia Spiegel, and Anton Eisenhauer and the Science Team of Expedition PS104

The Eocene-Oligocene Transition (~34.4–33.7 Ma) marks a major step in the long-term evolution from the greenhouse climate of the Early Palaeogene to the icehouse regime of the Late Neogene and Quaternary. However, it remains uncertain which landmasses were covered by ice sheets during the Early Oligocene Glacial Maximum (~33.7–33.2 Ma), an interval of peak glaciation inferred from deep-sea benthic foraminifera oxygen isotope records that immediately follows the Eocene-Oligocene Transition. The scarcity of Late Eocene and Early Oligocene continental and shallow-marine records in both Arctic and Antarctic regions has prevented the reconstruction of environmental conditions and ice-sheet extent during the Early Oligocene, which is critical for assessing ice–ocean–atmosphere interactions during early stages of the Cenozoic icehouse. Here, we present the first Early Oligocene shallow-marine record from the Pacific margin of West Antarctica, recovered from the central Amundsen Sea Embayment shelf on RV Polarstern expedition PS104 at Site 21. Marine mudstones recovered at this site document the presence of a vegetated archipelago at a palaeo-latitude of 73.5°S. Pollen assemblages and organic biomarker proxies indicate a cool-temperate Nothofagus-dominated forest situated within a productive marine archipelago. No evidence for marine terminating ice was detected in the cores from Site 21, thus indicating that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet was small or entirely absent during the Early Oligocene.

How to cite: Klages, J. P., Hillenbrand, C.-D., Bohaty, S. M., Salzmann, U., Bickert, T., Lohmann, G., Gohl, K., Kuhn, G., Titschack, J., Müller, J., Bauersachs, T., Frederichs, T., Larter, R. D., Hochmuth, K., Ehrmann, W., Rodríguez Tovar, F. J., Schmiedl, G., van de Flierdt, T., Spiegel, C., and Eisenhauer, A. and the Science Team of Expedition PS104: West Antarctic archipelago covered by cool-temperate forests during early Oligocene glaciation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1538, 2021.

EGU21-8613 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Continental temperature seasonality from Eocene Warmhouse to Oligocene Coolhouse — A model-data comparison

Agathe Toumoulin, Yannick Donnadieu, Delphine Tardif, Jean-Baptiste Ladant, Alexis Licht, Lutz Kunzmann, and Guillaume Dupont-Nivet

At the junction of warmhouse and coolhouse climate phases, the Eocene Oligocene Transition (EOT) is a key moment in the history of the Cenozoic climate. Yet, while it is accompanied by severe extinctions and biodiversity turnovers, terrestrial climate evolution remains poorly resolved. On lands, some fossil and geochemistry records suggest a particularly marked cooling in winter, which would have led to the development of more pronounced seasons (higher Mean Annual Range of Temperatures, MATR) in certain regions of the Northern Hemisphere. This type of climate change should have had consequences on biodiversity and an implication in some of the fauna and flora renewals described at the EOT. However, this season strengthening has been studied only superficially by model studies, and questions remain about the geographical extent of this phenomenon and the associated climatic processes. Although other components of the climate system vary seasonally (e.g., precipitation, wind), we therefore focus on the seasonality of temperatures only.

In order to better understand and describe temperature seasonality change patterns from the middle Eocene to the early Oligocene, we use the Earth System Model IPSL-CM5A2 and a set of simulations reconstructing the EOT through three major climate forcings: pCO2 decrease (1120/840 to 560 ppm), the Antarctic ice-sheet (AIS) formation, and the associated sea-level decrease (-70 m). 

Our results suggest that seasonality changes across the EOT rely on the combined effects of the different tested mechanisms which result in zonal to regional climate responses. Sea-level changes associated with the earliest stage of the AIS formation may have also contributed to middle to late Eocene MATR reinforcement. We reconstruct strong and heterogeneous patterns of seasonality changes across the EOT. Broad continental areas of increased MATR reflect a strengthening of seasonality (from 4°C to > 10°C increase of the MATR) in agreement with MATR and Coldest Month Mean Temperatures (CMMT) changes indicated by a review of existing proxies. pCO2 decrease induces a zonal pattern with alternating increasing and decreasing seasonality bands. In the northern high-latitudes, it results in sea-ice and surface albedo feedback, driving a strong increase in seasonality (up to 8°C MATR increase). Conversely, the onset of the AIS is responsible for a more constant surface albedo, which leads to a strong decrease in seasonality in the southern mid- to high-latitudes (> 40°S). Finally, continental areas emerged due to the sea level lowering cause the largest increase in seasonality and explain most of the global heterogeneity in MATR changes patterns. The seasonality change patterns we reconstruct are consistent with the variability of the EOT biotic crisis intensity across the Northern Hemisphere.

How to cite: Toumoulin, A., Donnadieu, Y., Tardif, D., Ladant, J.-B., Licht, A., Kunzmann, L., and Dupont-Nivet, G.: Continental temperature seasonality from Eocene Warmhouse to Oligocene Coolhouse — A model-data comparison, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8613, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8613, 2021.

EGU21-7881 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Particle tracking model results suggest little lateral transport bias in inorganic and organic SST proxies in the Mediterranean Sea

Addison Rice, Peter Nooteboom, Erik van Sebille, Francien Peterse, Martin Ziegler, and Appy Sluijs

Ocean currents can transport sinking particles hundreds of kilometers from their origin at the ocean surface to their burial location, resulting in an offset between sea surface temperatures (SSTs) above the burial site and the particle’s origin. Quantifying this offset in particles carrying molecules used in SST proxies can reduce uncertainty in paleoclimate reconstructions. In the Mediterranean Sea, where δ18Oforaminifera, UK’37- and TEX86-based SSTs can exhibit large offsets from surface conditions, understanding the possible contribution of lateral transport to proxy bias can provide additional insight when interpreting paleoclimate records.

In this study, Lagrangian particle tracking experiments are performed using the NEMO flow field to simulate transport and allow for a quantitative estimate of transport bias. The model determines the ocean surface origin locations of foraminifera and sedimentary particles that carry alkenones or GDGTs to compare with surface sediment datasets for δ18Oforaminifera, UK’37 and TEX86, respectively. A range of sinking speeds appropriate for the export of organic matter (6, 12, 25, 50, 100, 250, and 500 m/d) is used in the model to represent different export modes (i.e., individual coccoliths, coccospheres, aggregates), where the three fastest sinking speeds can also represent sinking foraminifera. Results show that lateral transport bias is generally small within the Mediterranean Sea and cannot explain the large offsets in proxy-based SST reconstructions in this basin.

How to cite: Rice, A., Nooteboom, P., van Sebille, E., Peterse, F., Ziegler, M., and Sluijs, A.: Particle tracking model results suggest little lateral transport bias in inorganic and organic SST proxies in the Mediterranean Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7881, 2021.

EGU21-12315 | vPICO presentations | CL1.13

Impacts of early vegetation on biogeochemical cycles

Suman Halder and Philipp Porada

Lycophytes (club mosses) represent a distinct lineage of vascular plants with a long history including numerous extant and extinct species. They enriched the soil carbon pool through newly developed root-like structures and promoted soil microbial activity by providing organic matter. They enhanced soil carbon dioxide (CO2) via root respiration and also modified soil hydrology. These effects had the potential to promote the dissolution of silicate minerals, thus intensifying silicate weathering. The weathering of silicate rocks is considered one of the most significant geo-chemical regulators of atmospheric CO2 on a long (hundreds of thousands to millions of years) timescale. The motivation for this study is to achieve an increased understanding of the realized impacts of lycophytes on silicate weathering and past climate. To this end, it is necessary to quantify physiological characteristics, spatial distribution, the carbon balance, and hydrological impacts of early lycophytes. These properties, however, cannot be easily derived from proxies. Hence, as a first step, a process-based model is developed here to estimate net carbon uptake by these organisms at the local scale, considering key features such as root distribution, stomatal regulation of water loss, and root respiration.
The model features ranges of key physiological traits of lycophytes to predict the emerging characteristics of the lycophyte community under any given climate by implicitly simulating the process of selection. In this way, also extinct plant communities can be represented.
In addition to physiological properties, the model also simulates weathering rates using a simple limit-based approach and estimates the biotic enhancement of weathering by lycophytes. We run the Lycophyte model, called LYCOm, at seven sites encompassing various climate zones under today's climatic conditions. LYCOm is able to simulate realistic properties of lycophyte communities at the respective locations and estimates an average NPP ranging from 245 g carbon m-2 year-1 in Costa Rica to 126 g carbon m-2 year-1 in Estonia. Our limit-based weathering model predicts a chemical weathering rate ranging from 0.026 to 0.31 mm rock a-1 , thereby highlighting the potential importance of lycophytes at the local scale for enhancing chemical weathering. Our modeling study establishes a basis for assessing biotic enhancement of weathering by lycophytes at the global scale and also for the geological past. 

How to cite: Halder, S. and Porada, P.: Impacts of early vegetation on biogeochemical cycles, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12315, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12315, 2021.

CL1.14 – Deep-time climate simulation and reconstruction

EGU21-15737 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14 | Highlight

Some illustrations of large tectonically driven climate changes in Earth history

Zhongshi Zhang and Gilles Ramstein

Nearly A century ago the pioneering book published in 1924 “Die Klimate der geologischen Vorzeit “ explained by plate motion the evolution of vegetation revealed in sedimentary records. Nevertheless, they did not invoke climate changes. In the second part of the 20th century the intricate relationship between tectonics, long-term carbon cycle and climate was depicted by James G. C. Walker (1981). Since these major steps, climate modeling of the Earth system kept on improving and including more and more components and processes to enable the investigation of deep time periods using general circulation model that can account for atmosphere and ocean dynamics. Here we illustrate long but drastic climate changes clearly related with tectonics, through three different examples:

1)  The crucial role of paleogeography (continental distribution) to explain the drawdown of atmospheric carbon dioxide and the huge glaciation associated that occured during the Neoproterozoic period.

2)  The shrinkage of large epicontinental Paratethys that covered a large part of Eastern Europe and Western Asia and its impact on both monsoonal systems (African and Asian) since 40 Ma.

3) The large impact of mountain range uplifts since Eocene both in Asia (Tibetan Plateau and Himalaya) and in Africa (buildup of the rift), on atmosphere and ocean dynamics.

These studies not only allow for testing the ability of Earth system models to capture long term changes of Earth climate, but they pinpoint the pivotal role tectonics played in shaping the long-term evolution of atmospheric CO2 and monsoon patterns.

How to cite: Zhang, Z. and Ramstein, G.: Some illustrations of large tectonically driven climate changes in Earth history, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15737, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15737, 2021.

EGU21-8354 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14 | Highlight

Arctic winter warming due to cloud feedbacks in warm climates

Eli Tziperman

The climate of the Cretaceous and Eocene (146-34 Million years ago) was exceptionally warm. Crocodiles and Palm trees, which cannot withstand a few nights of subfreezing temperatures, could be found in the waters of Greenland and in the middle of present day Canada, where current winter temperatures can drop to -40C. State-of-the-art climate general circulation models cannot reproduce the exceptionally warm continental winter temperature during these periods even with very high atmospheric CO2 concentrations. One wonders whether these models are missing some significant feedback that may also affect their future global warming projections. We present two cloud feedbacks that may have contributed to such past warming, and that are found to be part of the atmospheric response to future warm climate projections, explaining the lapse-rate feedback in future Arctic climate change scenarios and the projected appearance of tropical-like deep convection during winter in the Arctic.

Recent studies (Cronin and Tziperman 2015; Cronin, Li and Tziperman, 2017), using Lagrangian single column atmospheric models, have proposed that in warmer climates low clouds would form as maritime air masses advect into Northern Hemisphere high-latitude continental interiors during winter (DJF). The greenhouse effect due to these low clouds could reduce surface radiative cooling and suppress Arctic air formation events, explaining the warm winter high-latitude continental interiors during past warm climates, and the positive lapse-rate feedback in future Arctic climate change scenarios. A 3D atmospheric general circulation model (Hu, Cronin and Tziperman, 2018) confirms these finding by simulating different warming scenarios under prescribed CO2 and sea surface temperature (SST) conditions. Winter 2-meter temperatures on extreme cold days is found to increase about 50\% faster than the winter mean temperatures and the prescribed SST. Low cloud fraction and surface longwave (LW) cloud radiative forcing also increase in both the winter mean state and on extreme cold days, consistent with the Lagrangian air-mass studies.

Air parcels experiencing extreme cold events in the present climate often arrive from Siberia and pass over the Arctic. An ice-free Arctic (during past of future warm climates) allows air parcels can accumulate moisture and therefore experience the formation of low clouds and thus the suppression of Arctic air formation. An ice free Arctic may be triggered due to the convective cloud feedback of (Abbot and Tziperman 2008, 2009; Abbot et al. 2009; Arnold et al. 2014) in which tropical-like deep atmospheric convection is triggered at high-latitudes during winter time. The radiative effects of the high tropospheric clouds associated with the atmospheric convection act to keep the surface warm, and this in turn maintains the convection active. Finally, it will be shown that the proposed cloud feedback is at work also in effectively all models run under the extended RCP 8.5 scenario, and that this may aid in the elimination of both summer and winter sea ice from the Arctic in these simulations, acting together with other related Arctic feedbacks (Hankel and Tziperman 2021, submitted).

References: https://www.seas.harvard.edu/climate/eli/reprints/

 

How to cite: Tziperman, E.: Arctic winter warming due to cloud feedbacks in warm climates, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8354, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8354, 2021.

EGU21-2794 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Revising key parameters for long-term carbon cycle models

Chloé M. Marcilly, Trond H. Torsvik, Mathew Domeier, and Dana L. Royer

CO2 is the most important greenhouse gas in the Earth’s atmosphere and has fluctuated considerably over geological time. However, proxies for past CO2 concentrations have large uncertainties and are mostly limited to Devonian and younger times. Consequently, CO2 modelling plays a key role in reconstructing past climate fluctuations. Facing the limitations with the current CO2 models, we aim to refine two important forcings for CO2 levels over the Phanerozoic, namely carbon degassing and silicate weathering.

Silicate weathering and carbonate deposition is widely recognized as a primary sink of carbon on geological timescales and is largely influenced by changes in climate, which in turn is linked to changes in paleogeography. The role of paleogeography on silicate weathering fluxes has been the focus of several studies in recent years. Their aims were mostly to constrain climatic parameters such as temperature and precipitation affecting weathering rates through time. However, constraining the availability of exposed land is crucial in assessing the theoretical amount of weathering on geological time scales. Associated with changes in climatic zones, the fluctuation of sea-level is critical for defining the amount of land exposed to weathering. The current reconstructions used inmodels tend to overestimate the amount of exposed land to weathering at periods with high sea levels. Through the construction of continental flooding maps, we constrain the effective land area undergoing silicate weathering for the past 520 million years. Our maps not only reflect sea-level fluctuations but also contain climate-sensitive indicators such as coal (since the Early Devonian) and evaporites to evaluate climate gradients and potential weatherablity through time. This is particularly important after the Pangea supercontinent formed but also for some time after its break-up.

Whilst silicate weathering is an important CO2 sink, volcanic carbon degassing is a major source but one of the least constrained climate forcing parameters. There is no clear consensus on the history of degassing through geological time as there are no direct proxies for reconstructing carbon degassing, but various proxy methods have been postulated. We propose new estimates of plate tectonic degassing for the Phanerozoic using both subduction flux from full-plate models and zircon age distribution from arcs (arc-activity) as proxies.

The effect of revised modelling parameters for weathering and degassing was tested in the well-known long-term models GEOCARBSULF and COPSE. They revealed the high influence of degassing on CO2 levels using those models, highlighting the need for enhanced research in this direction. The use of arc-activity as a proxy for carbon degassing leads to interesting responses in the Mesozoic and brings model estimates closer to CO2  proxy values. However, from simulations using simultaneously the revised input parameters (i.e weathering and degassing) large model-proxy discrepancies remain and notably for the Triassic and Jurassic.

 

How to cite: M. Marcilly, C., Torsvik, T. H., Domeier, M., and Royer, D. L.: Revising key parameters for long-term carbon cycle models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2794, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2794, 2021.

EGU21-4742 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Constraining Neoproterozoic subtropical low-level clouds to assess the plausibility of near-Snowball Earth states

Christoph Braun, Aiko Voigt, Johannes Hörner, and Joaquim G. Pinto

EGU21-10559 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14 | Highlight

Large Equatorial Seasonal Cycle during Marinoan Snowball Earth

Yonggang Liu

In the equatorial regions on Earth today, the seasonal cycle of the monthly mean surface air temperature is <10°C. However, deep (>1 m) sand wedges were found near the paleoequator in the Marinoan glaciogenic deposits at ~635 million years ago, indicating a large seasonal cycle (probably >30°C). Such observations have been used to argue that the Earth had a very high obliquity (>54°) during that time, leading to the proposal of high-obliquity hypothesis. Although the hypothesis was criticized for not being able to find a mechanism for the Earth to return to a low-obliquity state, there was no other explanation for the observed large equatorial seasonal cycle. Through numerical simulations, we show that the equatorial seasonal cycle could reach >30°C at various continental locations if the oceans are completely frozen over, as would have been the case for a snowball Earth, or could reach ~20°C if the oceans are not completely frozen over, as would have been the case for a waterbelt Earth or slushball Earth. It is pointed out that the eccentricity is important for the equatorial seasonal cycle especially when the climate is cold and dry. These large equatorial seasonal cycle above are obtained at the maximum eccentricity of the Earth orbit, i.e., 0.0679, and will be approximately 10°C smaller if the present-day eccentricity is used. For these seasonal cycles, theoretical calculations show that the deep sand wedges form readily in a snowball Earth while hardly form in a waterbelt Earth. Therefore, our results remove a loophole of the (hard) snowball Earth hypothesis, while make the waterbelt Earth and high-obliquity Earth hypotheses much less appealing.

How to cite: Liu, Y.: Large Equatorial Seasonal Cycle during Marinoan Snowball Earth, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10559, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10559, 2021.

EGU21-10524 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Large influence of dust on the Precambrian climate 

Peng Liu, Yonggang Liu, Yiran Peng, Jean-Francois Lamarque, Mingxing Wang, and Yongyun Hu

On present-day Earth, dust emissions are restricted only to a few desert regions mainly due to the distribution of land vegetation. The atmospheric dust loading is thus relatively small and has a slight cooling effect on the surface climate. For the Precambrian (before ~540 Ma), however, dust emission might be much more widespread since land vegetation was absent. Here, our simulations using an Earth system model (CESM1.2.2) demonstrate that the global dust emission during that time might be an order of magnitude larger than that of the present day, and could have cooled the global climate by ~10 °C. Similarly, the dust deposition in the ocean, an important source of nutrition for the marine ecosystem, was also increased by a factor of ~10. Therefore, dust was a critical component of the early Earth system, and should always be considered when studying the climate and biogeochemistry of the Precambrian.

How to cite: Liu, P., Liu, Y., Peng, Y., Lamarque, J.-F., Wang, M., and Hu, Y.: Large influence of dust on the Precambrian climate , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10524, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10524, 2021.

EGU21-8367 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14 | Highlight

The effects of CO2 increase and its link to the mass extincton at the Permo-Triassic boundary

Despina Zoura, Daniel J. Hill, Stephen J. Hunter, Alan M. Haywood, and Paul B. Wignall

The Permo–Triassic Boundary (PTB) marks a time of profound climatic change. Near the PTB (~252 Ma), the largest known mass extinction occurred with more than 90% of marine species and 70% of terrestrial species became extinct. The mass extinction is linked to a massive warming event at the PTB, where tropical regions became too hot for survival ofspecies. The increase in atmospheric CO2 during the Permian and the PTB is mainly attributed to the decrease of chemically weatherable fresh silicate rock due to orogenesis, and the CO2 released in the atmosphere from the Siberian Traps. In this study, we use the UK Met Office fully coupled HadCM3L General Circulation Model (GCM) to perform Permo-Triassic climate simulations with different atmospheric CO2 values that encompass most of the estimates of atmospheric CO2 concentration during this time, to provide more insights about the climate changes during the end Permian – early Triassic. Specifically, we focus on: a) the spatial extension of dry conditions/lethally hot temperatures under different CO2 conditions, b) the seasonal surface temperature difference and precipitation changes at higher latitudes and c) the effects of increased atmospheric CO2 on the large-scale wind and monsoonal circulation. 

How to cite: Zoura, D., Hill, D. J., Hunter, S. J., Haywood, A. M., and Wignall, P. B.: The effects of CO2 increase and its link to the mass extincton at the Permo-Triassic boundary, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8367, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8367, 2021.

EGU21-1459 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14 | Highlight

Evolution of the monsoon system over the past 250 million years

Yongyun Hu, Jiaqi Guo, Xiang Li, Jiaenjing Lan, Qifan Lin, Jing Han, Jian Zhang, Yonggang Liu, and Jun Yang

The evolution of continents over the past 250 million year is remarked by the breakup of the Pangea supercontinent. The changes of continents must have important influences on regional and global monsoon systems because monsoons are primarily a result of land-sea thermal contrast.

To study how the monsoon system had been evolved with continent changes over the past 250 million years, we carried out a series of climate simulations, using the Community Earth System Model (CESM). Changes in continents, mountain building, solar radiation, and carbon dioxide (CO2) are all considered in the simulations. In the present talk, we will present our preliminary simulation results of how the mega-monsoon associated with the supercontinent Pangea evolved into the six regional monsoons at the present over the past 250 million years. We will also demonstrate ocean circulation changes with different continent distributions, such as ENSO, and its influences on regional monsoons. Monsoon impacts on land-surface processes and the associated carbon-cycle will be also presented.

How to cite: Hu, Y., Guo, J., Li, X., Lan, J., Lin, Q., Han, J., Zhang, J., Liu, Y., and Yang, J.: Evolution of the monsoon system over the past 250 million years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1459, 2021.

EGU21-1503 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Weak Equatorial Superrotation During the Past 250 Million years

Jiawenjing Lan, Jun Yang, and Yongyun Hu

For modern Earth, the annual-mean equatorial atmosphere is flowing from east to west or called easterly winds. This is mainly due to the deceleration effect of the seasonal cross-equatorial flows of the Hadley cells, against the acceleration effect of equatorial Rossby and Kelvin waves excited from tropical convection and latent heating release. In this work, we examine the evolution of equatorial winds during the past 250 million years (Ma) using the global Earth system model CESM1.2.2. Three climatic factors different from the modern Earth, solar constant, atmospheric CO2 concentration, and land-sea configuration, are considered in the simulations. We find that the equatorial winds in the upper troposphere change the sign to westerly flows or called atmospheric superrotation in certain eras. The strength of the superrotation is comparable to the magnitude of the present easterly winds, several meters per second, not strong. This phenomenon occurs when the waves are relatively stronger and/or the Hadley cells are relatively weaker, which in turn are due to the changes in the three factors.

How to cite: Lan, J., Yang, J., and Hu, Y.: Weak Equatorial Superrotation During the Past 250 Million years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1503, 2021.

EGU21-2018 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Migrations of tropical rain belt driven by tectonic dynamics over the past 250 Ma

Ji Nie, jing Han, and yongyun hu


The tropical rainfall, which contributes on about half of global rainfall, is manifested as a quasi-global rain belt called the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ). This study examines the linkage between continental configurations and the annual mean latitude of ITCZ over the tectonic timescale. Over the past 250Ma, the break of supercontinent Pangea led to dramatic changes of continental mass distribution driven by tectonic dynamics. With a series of slicewise general climate model (GCM, CESM1.0) simulations over the past 250Ma, we investigate how is the latitude of ITCZ changes over time and how do the continental configurations set the latitude of ITCZ. With an energetic framework of the ITCZ latitude, we examined the contributions of the hemispheric asymmetry of radiation budget and ocean heat transport on the ITCZ latitude, and further demonstrate that those factors are largely driven by the continental configurations.

How to cite: Nie, J., Han, J., and hu, Y.: Migrations of tropical rain belt driven by tectonic dynamics over the past 250 Ma, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2018, 2021.

EGU21-6803 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Influence of Dust on Climate during the Mesozoic 

Qifan Lin and Yonggang Liu

Dust in the atmosphere can affect climate by directly absorbing and scattering solar radiation. In present day, most of dust is emitted from the dry regions over North Africa and Arabian Peninsula, it has been shown that they impact on global mean surface temperature, African monsoon, number of tropical cyclones over the Atlantic Ocean, ENSO variability and the strength of Atlantic meridional ocean circulation (AMOC). During the Mesozoic, the continental configuration was very different from the present, the supercontinent Pangea gradually broke up and Atlantic Ocean formed during this time period. On a different continental configuration, the area and location of dry regions may be very different, so the dust emission and atmospheric dust loading is different too. In this work, we use the global Earth system model CESM1.2.2 to examine the influence of dust on climate during the Mesozoic. Specifically, we simulate the dust and climate at two time slices, 250 million years ago (Ma) and 80 Ma. Results show that the atmospheric dust loading in both periods was much higher than that of present day. Such dust induced significant cooling of the surface climate, especially over polar regions.

How to cite: Lin, Q. and Liu, Y.: Influence of Dust on Climate during the Mesozoic , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6803, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6803, 2021.

EGU21-3690 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Evolution of the ocean monsoon regions over the past 250 million years

Jing Han, Yongyun Hu, and Yonggang Liu

A set of deep-time climate simulations each 10Ma years from 250Ma to PI are conducted by using the NCAR-CESM1.2, for understanding the evolution of the ocean monsoon regions driven by tectonic dynamics over the past 250 million years and exploring its variation mechanisms. In recent years, scientists have proposed the concept of a global monsoon system, which includes not only typical monsoon regions (such as the African monsoon region and South Asian monsoon region), but also the atypical Northwest Pacific Ocean monsoon region. Research on the ocean monsoon is very limited, especially in the field of paleoclimate. The results in this paper show that the horizontal gradients of the thickness of the ocean mixed layer may be more important for the formation of the ocean monsoon than land-sea thermal contrast, which is confirmed by the aquaplanet simulations with various gradients of the ocean mixed-layer thickness. Near the Pacific monsoon region in the northern hemisphere, the thickness of the ocean mixed layer has obvious meridional and zonal gradients, which will correspond to the meridional and zonal thermal contrasts. In addition, there are obvious seasonal reversals in the gradients of the ocean mixed-layer thickness in summer and winter, and the corresponding longitudinal and zonal thermal contrast produce seasonal reversals. Over the past 250 million years, the thickness of the ocean mixed layer on the east side of the Pacific Ocean Basin in the Northern Hemisphere has deepened, and the corresponding ocean monsoon area on the east side of the Pacific Ocean has decreased. The changes in the thickness of the ocean mixed layer are closely related to the changes in the surface wind field. Examining the changes in the atmospheric circulations, we find that the Pacific subtropical high strengthens and extends from east to the west bank of the ocean basin, where the atmospheric low-level anticyclonic circulation causes the ocean surface layer to converge and sink and thus causes the ocean mixed layer to deepen. The changes in the Pacific subtropical high are related to changes in the continental monsoon region. Since the 170Ma, the Pangea supercontinent splits up, causing the supercontinent's inland water vapor to increase, the land monsoon area to increase, and the ocean monsoon area to decrease. According to the "monsoon-desert mechanism" of Rodwell and Hoskins, we can understand the relationship between the strengthening of land monsoon condensation heating and the formation of subtropical high over the western ocean.

How to cite: Han, J., Hu, Y., and Liu, Y.: Evolution of the ocean monsoon regions over the past 250 million years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3690, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3690, 2021.

EGU21-10751 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

The evolution of Pacific-North American teleconnection during the past 250 million years

Zhibo Li and Yongyun Hu

The Pacific-North American (PNA) teleconnection is one of the most crucial climate modes in the current climate. It is well known that the PNA is related to the ENSO variability, and it has a significant influence on North American climate. Whereas, the traditional physical mechanisms about the PNA is probably not applicable for the deep-time paleoclimate. During the past 250 million years, climate variabilities are strongly structured by the evolution of land-sea distribution, CO2 forcing, and solar radiation. In this work, we use the Community Earth System Model (CESM) version 1.2.2 to investigate the changes of PNA every 10 million years. The deep-time simulation provides a new way to understand the nature of PNA and the related physical mechanisms. We found that the spatial distribution of the PNA-like mode is closely related to the land-sea distribution. And the combination effect from atmospheric circulation and the thermal condition is proved to be important to modulate the evolution of PNA.

How to cite: Li, Z. and Hu, Y.: The evolution of Pacific-North American teleconnection during the past 250 million years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10751, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10751, 2021.

EGU21-2606 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Elevation of the Gangdese Mountains and Their Simulated Impacts on Asian Climate during the Late Cretaceous

Jian Zhang, Yonggang Liu, Xiaomin Fang, Tao Zhang, Chenguang Zhu, and Chengshan Wang

The Tibetan Plateau has a significant impact on the Asian climate due to its high topography. However, its uplift history, especially the uplift of the Gangdese Mountains in its early stage, is under intense debate. Most quantitative reconstructions are done for the Cenozoic only, impeding our understanding of the geodynamic and paleoenvironmental evolution during the Cretaceous. How high would the Gangdese Mountains be then, and what effects would they have on Asian climate? In order to explore these two questions, here we model the impacts of the Gangdese Mountains on the Asian climate during the Late Cretaceous by employing the Community Earth System Model version 1.2.2. It is found that the extent of dry land in East Asia is sensitive to the altitude of the Gangdese Mountains; it expands eastwards and southwards with the rise of the mountain range, which is due to the fact that the Gangdese Mountains can significantly reduce the precipitation over the low- to mid-latitude Asia. We then attempt to constrain their paleoaltitude using the available climate indicators in the sediments. The aridity index is further calculated for this region, and its comparison with the climate records suggests that Gangdese Mountains should be higher than 1 km but lower than 3 km during the Late Cretaceous, most likely ~2 km.

How to cite: Zhang, J., Liu, Y., Fang, X., Zhang, T., Zhu, C., and Wang, C.: Elevation of the Gangdese Mountains and Their Simulated Impacts on Asian Climate during the Late Cretaceous, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2606, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2606, 2021.

The evolution of Cenozoic climate patterns in Asia has been linked to uplift of the Tibetan Plateau (TP), retreat of the Paratethys Sea, and global cooling. However, less attention has been placed on the latitudinal change of the TP. Here we report new climate modeling to explore how modern climate changes as a function of topographic growth and spatial migration of the TP. Our results show that the northward displacement of the uplifted proto‐TP within the subtropics can signifificantly affect the wind and precipitation pattern over East‐Central Asia. By compiling proxy‐based climatic records, paleolatitudinal and paleoelevational evolution models of the proto‐TP, and in comparison with previous modeling under a global paleogeography, we suggest that the northward migration of the proto‐TP in the Paleogene could have intensifified the aridity in Central Asia, but its inflfluence on East Asian precipitation and monsoonal circulation could be dependent on the paleogeography and other boundary conditions.

How to cite: Zhu, C.: East‐Central Asian Climate Evolved With the Northward Migration of the High Proto‐Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1878, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1878, 2021.

EGU21-5262 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Cenozoic advance of the East Asian monsoon promoted weathering of the magnesium-rich southern China upper crust and its significance for global geochemical cycles of carbon and magnesium

Yibo Yang, Albert Galy, Xiaomin Fang, Christian France-Lanord, Shiming Wan, Rongsheng Yang, Jian Zhang, Ran Zhang, Song Yang, Yunfa Miao, Yudong Liu, and Chengcheng Ye

The Oligocene-Miocene boundary climatic reorganization linked to the northward advance of the East Asian monsoon in subtropical China is a potentially important but poorly constrained atmospheric CO2 consumption process. Here, we performed a first-order estimate of the difference in CO2 consumption induced by silicate chemical weathering and organic carbon burial in subtropical China related to this monsoon advance. Our results show that an increase in CO2 consumption by silicate weathering varies between ~1% and 15% of the current global continental silicate sink with an ~60% contribution of Mg-silicate weathering but a negligible increase in the global organic carbon burial (<3.5%) since the late Oligocene. The results highlight the significant role of weathering of the Mg-rich upper continental crust in East China that would also contribute significantly to the rise in the Mg content of the ocean. Our study thus suggests that the uplift of the Himalaya-Tibetan Plateau can lead to indirect modification of the global carbon and magnesium cycles by changing the regional hydrological cycle in areas of East Asia that are tectonically less active in addition to the well studied direct impact of high erosion-induced atmospheric CO2 consumption along the orogenic belt in South Asia.

How to cite: Yang, Y., Galy, A., Fang, X., France-Lanord, C., Wan, S., Yang, R., Zhang, J., Zhang, R., Yang, S., Miao, Y., Liu, Y., and Ye, C.: Cenozoic advance of the East Asian monsoon promoted weathering of the magnesium-rich southern China upper crust and its significance for global geochemical cycles of carbon and magnesium, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5262, 2021.

EGU21-10479 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Changes in Tibetan Plateau latitude as an important factor for understanding East Asian climate since the Eocene: A modeling study 

Ran Zhang, Dabang Jiang, Gilles Ramstein, Zhongshi Zhang, Peter C Lippert, and Entao Yu

Previous climate modeling studies suggest that the surface uplift of the Himalaya–Tibetan plateau (TP) is a crucial parameter for the onset and intensification of the East Asian monsoon during the Cenozoic. Most of these studies have only considered the Himalaya–TP in its present location between ∼26°N and ∼40°N despite numerous recent geophysical studies that reconstruct the Himalaya–TP 10° or more of latitude to the south during the early Paleogene. We have designed a series of climate simulations to explore the sensitivity of East Asian climate to the latitude of the Himalaya–TP. Our simulations suggest that the East Asian climate strongly depends on the latitude of the Himalaya–TP. Surface uplift of a proto-Himalaya–TP in the subtropics intensifies aridity throughout inland Asia north of ∼40°N and enhances precipitation over East Asia. In contrast, the rise of a proto-Himalaya–TP in the tropics only slightly intensifies aridity in inland Asia north of ∼40°N, and slightly increases precipitation in East Asia. Importantly, this climate
sensitivity to the latitudinal position of the Himalaya–TP is non-linear, particularly for precipitation across East Asia.

How to cite: Zhang, R., Jiang, D., Ramstein, G., Zhang, Z., Lippert, P. C., and Yu, E.: Changes in Tibetan Plateau latitude as an important factor for understanding East Asian climate since the Eocene: A modeling study , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10479, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10479, 2021.

EGU21-10454 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Large shift of the Pacific Walker Circulation across the Cenozoic

Qing Yan

Fluctuations in the Pacific Walker circulation (PWC), a zonally-oriented overturning cell across the tropical Pacific, can cause widespread climatic and biogeochemical perturbations. It remains unknown how the PWC developed during the Cenozoic era, with its substantial changes in greenhouse gases and continental positions. Through a suite of coupled model simulations on tectonic timescales, we demonstrate that the PWC was ~38º broader and ~5% more intense during the Early Eocene relative to present. As the climate cooled from the Early Eocene to the Late Miocene, the width of the PWC shrank, accompanied by an increase in intensity that was tied to the enhanced Pacific zonal temperature gradient. However, the locations of the western and eastern branches behave differently from the Early Eocene to the Late Miocene, with the western edge remained steady with time due to the relatively stable geography of the western tropical Pacific; the eastern edge migrates westward with time as the South American continent moves northwest. A transition occurs in the PWC between the Late Miocene and Late Pliocene, manifested by an eastward shift (both the western and eastern edges migrate eastward by >12º) and weakening (by ~22%), which we show here is linked with the closure of the tropical seaways. Moreover, our results suggest that rising CO2 favors a weaker PWC under the same land-sea configurations, a robust feature across the large spread of Cenozoic climates considered here, supporting a weakening of the PWC in a warmer future.

How to cite: Yan, Q.: Large shift of the Pacific Walker Circulation across the Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10454, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10454, 2021.

We present results from an ensemble of eight climate models, each of which has carried out simulations of theearly Eocene climate optimum (EECO, ∼50 million years ago). These simulations have been carried out in the framework of DeepMIP (www.deepmip.org), and as such all models have been configured with the same paleogeographic and vegetation boundary conditions. The results indicate that these non-CO2 boundary conditions contribute between 3 and 5oC to Eocene warmth. Compared to results from previous studies, the DeepMIP simulations show in general reduced spread of global mean surface temperature response across the ensemble for a given atmospheric CO2 concentration, and an increased climate sensitivity on average. An energy balance analysis of the model ensemble indicates that global mean warming in the Eocene compared with preindustrial arises mostly from decreases in emissivity due to the elevated CO2 (and associated water vapour and long-wave cloud feedbacks), whereas in terms of the meridional temperature gradient, the reduction in the Eocene is primarily due to emissivity and albedo changes due to the non-CO2 boundary conditions (i.e. removal of the Antarctic ice sheet and changes in vegetation). Three of the models (CESM, GFDL, and NorESM) show results that are consistent with the proxies in terms of global mean temperature, meridional SST gradient, and CO2, without prescribing changes to model parameters. In addition, many of the models agree well with the first-order spatial patterns in the SST proxies. However, at a more regional scale the models lack skill. In particular, in the southwest Pacific, the modelled anomalies are substantially less than indicated by the proxies; here, modelled continental surface air temperature anomalies are more consistent with surface air temperature proxies, implying a possible inconsistency between marine and terrestrial temperatures in either the proxiesor models in this region. Our aim is that the documentation of the large scale features and model-data comparison presented herein will pave the way to further studies that explore aspects of the model simulations in more detail, for example the ocean circulation, hydrological cycle, and modes of variability; and encourage sensitivity studies to aspects such as paleogeography, orbital configuration, and aerosols

How to cite: Lunt, D. and the DeepMIP team: DeepMIP: Model intercomparison of early Eocene climatic optimum (EECO) large-scale climate features and comparison with proxy data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4744, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4744, 2021.

EGU21-14127 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Drivers of (non-)linear Eocene surface warming in the DeepMIP ensemble

Sebastian Steinig, Jiang Zhu, and Ran Feng and the DeepMIP team

The early Eocene greenhouse represents the warmest interval of the Cenozoic and therefore provides a unique opportunity to understand how the climate system operates under elevated atmospheric CO2 levels similar to those projected for the end of the 21st century. Early Eocene geological records indicate a large increase in global mean surface temperatures compared to present day (by ~14°C) and a greatly reduced meridional temperature gradient (by ~30% in SST). However, reproducing these large-scale climate features at reasonable CO2 levels still poses a challenge for current climate models. Recent modelling studies indicate an important role for shortwave (SW) cloud feedbacks to drive increases in climate sensitivity with global warming, which helps to close the gap between simulated and reconstructed Eocene global warmth and temperature gradient. Nevertheless, the presence of such state-dependent feedbacks and their relative strengths in other models remain unclear.

In this study, we perform a systematic investigation of the simulated surface warming and the underlying mechanisms in the recently published DeepMIP ensemble. The DeepMIP early Eocene simulations use identical paleogeographic boundary conditions and include six models with suitable output: CESM1.2_CAM5, GFDL_CM2.1, HadCM3B_M2.1aN, IPSLCM5A2, MIROC4m and NorESM1_F. We advance previous energy balance analysis by applying the approximate partial radiative perturbation (APRP) technique to quantify the individual contributions of surface albedo, cloud and non-cloud atmospheric changes to the simulated Eocene top-of-the-atmosphere SW flux anomalies. We further compare the strength of these planetary albedo feedbacks to changes in the longwave atmospheric emissivity and meridional heat transport in the warm Eocene climate. Particular focus lies in the sensitivity of the feedback strengths to increasing global mean temperatures in experiments at a range of atmospheric CO2 concentrations between x1 to x9 preindustrial levels.

Preliminary results indicate that all models that provide data for at least 3 different CO2 levels show an increase of the equilibrium climate sensitivity at higher global mean temperatures. This is associated with an increase of the overall strength of the positive SW cloud feedback with warming in those models. This nonlinear behavior seems to be related to both a reduction and optical thinning of low-level clouds, albeit with intermodel differences in the relative importance of the two mechanisms. We further show that our new APRP results can differ significantly from previous estimates based on cloud radiative forcing alone, especially in high-latitude areas with large surface albedo changes. We also find large intermodel variability and state-dependence in meridional heat transport modulated by changes in the atmospheric latent heat transport. Ongoing work focuses on the spatial patterns of the climate feedbacks and the implications for the simulated meridional temperature gradients.

How to cite: Steinig, S., Zhu, J., and Feng, R. and the DeepMIP team: Drivers of (non-)linear Eocene surface warming in the DeepMIP ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14127, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14127, 2021.

EGU21-11913 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Cooling of the Northern Hemisphere triggered by Northeast Atlantic opening at the Eocene – Oligocene Transition 

Eivind Straume, Aleksi Nummelin, Carmen Gaina, and Kerim Nisancioglu

The Eocene – Oligocene Transition (~33.7 million years ago), marks the largest step transformation within the Cenozoic cooling trend, and is characterized by a sudden growth of the Antarctic ice sheets. The role of changes in oceanic basin configuration and the evolution of key oceanic gateways in triggering these climatic variations remains disputed. Here we implement a new state-of-the-art paleogeography model in the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM-F) to investigate the effect of oceanic gateway changes on the Eocene – Oligocene climate. We run different cases using realistic max/min depth configurations of the Atlantic – Arctic oceanic gateways, the Tethys Seaway, and the Southern Ocean gateways, and investigate the ocean and climate sensitivity to these changes. In addition, we run separate simulations investigating the impact on the carbon cycle. The models show that changes in the Atlantic – Arctic gateways (i.e. Greenland – Scotland Ridge and the Fram Strait) cause the most significant changes in ocean circulation and climate compared to the Southern Ocean gateways or the Tehthys Seaway. The Iceland mantle plume caused depth variations on the Greenland – Scotland Ridge at this time, and our model result indicate that variations in dynamic support from the Iceland plume could have played a key role in the Eocene – Oligocene climate transition. Essentially, reduced dynamic support from the plume deepen the Greenland – Scotland Ridge and cause freshwater leakage from the Arctic Ocean which inhibits deep water formation in the North Atlantic, reducing the AMOC and ultimately cool the Northern Hemisphere.

How to cite: Straume, E., Nummelin, A., Gaina, C., and Nisancioglu, K.: Cooling of the Northern Hemisphere triggered by Northeast Atlantic opening at the Eocene – Oligocene Transition , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11913, 2021.

EGU21-10665 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Reconstructing early Eocene (~55 Ma) paleogeographic boundary conditions for use in paleoclimate modelling

Zhilin He, Zhongshi Zhang, and Zhengtang Guo

The early Eocene is a warm period with very high atmospheric CO2 levels, which receives many interests from climate modelling aspects. To simulate the early Eocene paleoclimate, a realistic reconstruction for land-sea distribution, paleotopography and paleobathymetry is the fundamental step. Here, we present global paleogeographic reconstructions for the early Eocene (~55 Ma), based on integrated paleogeographic data set, the Plate-tectonic reconstruction software (GPlates) and Geographic Information System software (ArcGIS). Comparing with previous paleogeographic reconstructions, we improve the reconstructions incorporated many latest geologic data and data set, including: (1) better representations of the Tethys Sea, some marginal or inland seas in the East and Southeast Asia, Atlantic and Arctic region, and the Drake Passage and Tasmanian Gateway; (2) integrated paleoelevation data of global high plateaus and mountains, especially the paleotopography of East Asia, and adopting the latest paleotopographic reconstruction data of the Antarctic; and (3) using the updated data set of oceanic crust paleo-age and oceanic sediment thickness to reconstruct the paleobathymetry.

How to cite: He, Z., Zhang, Z., and Guo, Z.: Reconstructing early Eocene (~55 Ma) paleogeographic boundary conditions for use in paleoclimate modelling, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10665, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10665, 2021.

EGU21-14704 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Early Eocene simulations with three different palaeogeographic conditions

Zijian Zhang, Zhongshi Zhang, and Zhengtang Guo

The early Eocene is a warm period with a very high atmosphere CO2 level in the Cenozoic. It  provides a good reference for our future climate under the Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 scenario. Therefore, the early Eocene climate has received many attentions in  modeling studies, for example, the Deep-Time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP). However, the early Eocene palaeogeographic conditions show remarkable contrasts to the present conditions. Meanwhile, there are a few different reconstructions for the early Eocene palaeogeography, which may cause further model spreads in simulating the early Eocene warm climate. Here, we present a series of experiments carried out with the NorESM1-F, under the framework of DeepMIP. In these experiments, we consider three different palaeogeographic reconstructions for the early Eocene. We also compare our simulations with climate proxy records, to validate which palaeogeographic reconstructions can reproduce simulations that agree better with the climate proxy records.

How to cite: Zhang, Z., Zhang, Z., and Guo, Z.: Early Eocene simulations with three different palaeogeographic conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14704, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14704, 2021.

EGU21-3578 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

The roles of global cooling and early Tibetan Plateau uplift on the enhanced aridity in Eocene Asian inland

Xiangyu Li, Zhongshi Zhang, Ran Zhang, and Qing Yan

Geological evidence shows that the Asian inland environment experienced enhanced aridity from the Early to the Late Eocene. The underlying mechanism for this enhanced Eocene aridity in the Asian inland is still not well illustrated and varies between global cooling and early Tibetan Plateau uplift. In this report, we evaluate the climate impact of three factors, global cooling, topographic uplift and land–sea reorganization, on the enhanced Eocene aridity in Asian inland, in the perspective view from paleoclimate modeling. Paleoclimate modeling supports the Eocene aridification in Asian inland explored by paleoclimate reconstruction. Both the early uplift of Tibetan Plateau and global cooling induced by atmospheric CO2 reduction contributed to the enhanced aridity in Asian inland in the late Eocene. The Eocene land sea redistribution caused the precipitation increase in Asian inland and hence didn’t contribute to the enhanced aridity there. The uplift of the central Tibetan Plateau during the early stage of the India–Asia collision is emphasized more to be responsible for the long-term Asian inland aridification during the Eocene, playing at least an equally important role as the global cooling induced by decrease in atmospheric CO2. The variation of atmospheric CO2 is likely more important in modulating the regional aridity, leading to the short-term fluctuations in this Eocene Asian inland aridification.

How to cite: Li, X., Zhang, Z., Zhang, R., and Yan, Q.: The roles of global cooling and early Tibetan Plateau uplift on the enhanced aridity in Eocene Asian inland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3578, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3578, 2021.

EGU21-13526 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Paleolake salinity evolution in the Qaidam Basin (NE Tibetan Plateau) between ~42 and 29 Ma: Links to global cooling and Paratethys sea incursions

Chengcheng Ye, Yibo Yang, Xiaomin Fang, Weilin Zhang, Chunhui Song, and Rongsheng Yang

Global cooling, the early uplift of the Tibetan Plateau, and the retreat of the Paratethys are three main factors that regulate long-term climate change in the Asian interior during the Cenozoic. However, the debated elevation history of the Tibetan Plateau and the overlapping climate effects of the Tibetan Plateau uplift and Paratethys retreat makes it difficult to assess the driving mechanism on regional climate change in a particular period. Some recent progress suggests that precisely dated Paratethys transgression/regression cycles appear to have fluctuated over broad regions with low relief in the northern Tibetan Plateau in the middle Eocene–early Oligocene, when the global climate was characterized by generally continuous cooling followed by the rapid Eocene–Oligocene climate transition (EOT). Therefore, a middle Eocene–early Oligocene record from the Asian interior with unambiguous paleoclimatic implications offers an opportunity to distinguish between the climatic effects of the Paratethys retreat and those of global cooling.

Here, we present a complete paleolake salinity record from middle Eocene to early Miocene (~42-29 Ma) in the Qaidam Basin using detailed clay boron content and clay mineralogical investigations. Two independent paleosalimeters, equivalent boron and Couch’s salinity, collectively present a three-staged salinity evolution, from an oligohaline–mesohaline environment in the middle Eocene (42-~34 Ma) to a mesosaline environment in late Eocene-early Oligocene (~34-~29 Ma). This clay boron-derived salinity evolution is further supported by the published chloride-based and ostracod-based paleosalinity estimates in the Qaidam Basin. Our quantitative paleolake reconstruction between ~42 and 29 Ma in the Qaidam Basin resembles the hydroclimate change in the neighboring Xining Basin, of which both present good agreement with changes of marine benthic oxygen isotope compositions. We thus speculated that the secular trend of clay boron-derived paleolake salinity in ~42-29 Ma is primarily controlled by global cooling, which regulates regional climate change by influencing the evaporation capacity in the moisture source of Qaidam Basin. Superimposed on this trend, the Paratethys transgression/regression cycles served as an important factor regulating wet/dry fluctuations in the Asian interior between ~42 and ~34 Ma.

How to cite: Ye, C., Yang, Y., Fang, X., Zhang, W., Song, C., and Yang, R.: Paleolake salinity evolution in the Qaidam Basin (NE Tibetan Plateau) between ~42 and 29 Ma: Links to global cooling and Paratethys sea incursions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13526, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13526, 2021.

EGU21-7781 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Uplift of the Pamir and Tian Shan set hydroclimate patterns in central Asia since the late Oligocene

Xin Wang, Barbara Carrapa, Xu Zhang, Ilhomjon Oimuhammadzoda, and Fahu Chen

The Cenozoic Asian aridification has been related to the retreat of the Paratethys, the uplift of the Tibet, and/or global cooling. However, the details of the mechanisms responsible for this paleoclimate shift remain poorly constrained. Modern observations indicate that interactions between mid-latitude westerlies and the Pamir-Tian Shan Mountains significantly impact hydroclimate patterns in central Asia today, and may have played an important role in driving Asian aridification during the Cenozoic. However, the timing when this topographic-atmospheric framework was established remains poorly constrained.

Here, we present magnetostratigraphy, U-Pb geochronology, thermochronology, paleoclimatology, stable carbon and oxygen isotope geochemistry, and climate modelling techniques to the Cenozoic sedimentary sequences in the Tajik Basin. Our results show that: 1) the penultimate and ultimate retreat of the Paratethys from central Asia occurred at ~41 and ~37.4 Ma, respectively; 2) the Pamirs have experienced active deformation and accelerated exhumation during the late Oligocene to early Miocene; 3) the windward (western) side of the Pamir and Tian Shan has been characterized by a wetter climate changes, whereas, the leeward (eastern) side of the orogen has been characterized by more arid conditions since the Late Oligocene; 4)  This distinct east-west hydroclimate differences, when integrated with climate modeling results, suggests that at least part of the Pamir-Tian Shan mountains had reached elevations ≥ 3 km and acted as a moisture barrier for the westerlies since ~25 Ma. We suggest that the interactions between the westerlies and the Pamir-Tian Shan orogen played an important role in driving Asian aridification since the Late Oligocene.

How to cite: Wang, X., Carrapa, B., Zhang, X., Oimuhammadzoda, I., and Chen, F.: Uplift of the Pamir and Tian Shan set hydroclimate patterns in central Asia since the late Oligocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7781, 2021.

EGU21-14742 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Simulation of the transition between Mid Miocene Climate Optimum (17-15 Ma) and Miocene Climate Transition (14 Ma)

Diane Segalla, Gilles Ramstein, Pierre Sepulchre, Frédéric Fluteau, and Florence Colleoni

Mid Miocene Climate Optimum (MMCO) is an interesting period. Indeed since Mid Eocene (40 Ma) the large trends of climate evolution are: a large decrease of pCO2 and a drastic cooling. The MMCO appears as a short period when these trends were reversed, during 2 Ma, followed by a new period of cooling. Using the IPSL CM5A2 coupled model, we simulated the MMCO using two different pCO2 values (2.5 PAL and 1.5 PAL) and for the Miocene Climate Transition MCT for which we used a pCO2 value of 1.5 PAL. Superimposed to these very long runs we further simulated sensitivity of these experiments to insolation at the top of the atmosphere for Antarctica ice-sheet. In our referent simulation, the astronomical parameters remained unchanged as present day, whereas we performed new simulations with maximum and minimum insolation at the top of the atmosphere for December, January, February (at 75°S). These series of experiments will be analyzed and compared with available data. Moreover, we will compare our results to other simulations using various OAGCMs. We will emphasize on the consistency between the climate simulated at high latitude and the prescribed ice-sheet reconstruction of Antarctica.

How to cite: Segalla, D., Ramstein, G., Sepulchre, P., Fluteau, F., and Colleoni, F.: Simulation of the transition between Mid Miocene Climate Optimum (17-15 Ma) and Miocene Climate Transition (14 Ma), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14742, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14742, 2021.

EGU21-7074 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

High and low- latitude forcing of East Asian monsoon precipitation change during the late Pliocene

Hansheng Wang, Junsheng Nie, and Zeng Luo

3.6 Ma represents a time period when Earth transitioned from single pole ice sheets to permanent ice sheets existing in both hemispheres. However, it remains unclear how this transition had its impact on East Asian summer monsoon system, which controls living of a large population. Here, we present a high-resolution (2~4 kyr) monsoon precipitation record from the Chaona section on the central Chinese Loess Plateau during the 3.95-2.95 Ma, using the magnetic parameter-based precipitation proxy (χfd/HIRM). The results reveal intensified precessional and semiprecessional fluctuations during high eccentricity, emphasizing direction role of low latitude insolation played in forcing Asian monsoon precipitation. The precipitation records also show that the 41-kyr cycles intensified after 3.3 Ma, in contrast with decreased obliquity variation amplitude of summer insolation. We interpret the enlarged 41-kyr precipitation cycles in our records as a result of high latitude ice sheet forcing. Together, our work provides an example demonstrating both high and low latitude forcing of Asian monsoon precipitation during the late Pliocene.

How to cite: Wang, H., Nie, J., and Luo, Z.: High and low- latitude forcing of East Asian monsoon precipitation change during the late Pliocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7074, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7074, 2021.

EGU21-10560 | vPICO presentations | CL1.14

Modeling a modern-like pCO2 Warm period with two versions of IPSL AOGCM

Ning Tan, Camille Contoux, Gilles Ramstein, Yong Sun, Christophe Dumas, Pierre Sepulchre, and Zhengtang Guo

The mid-Piacenzian warm period (3.264 to 3.025 Ma) is the most recent geological period with present-like atmospheric pCO2. A specific interglacial (Marine Isotope Stage KM5c, MIS KM5c; 3.205 Ma) has been selected for the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project phase 2 (PlioMIP 2). We carried out a series of experiments according to the design of PlioMIP2 with two versions of IPSL atmosphere–ocean coupled general circulation model (AOGCM): IPSL-CM5A and IPSL-CM5A2. Our results show that the simulated MIS KM5c climate presents enhanced warming at mid- to high latitudes when compared to the PlioMIP 1, resulting from the enhanced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation caused by the high-latitude seaway changes. The sensitivity experiments, conducted with IPSL- CM5A2, show that, apart from the pCO2,  both modified orography and reduced ice sheets contribute substantially to mid- to high latitude warming in MIS KM5c. When considering the pCO2 uncertainties (+/−50 ppmv) during the Pliocene, the response of the modeled mean annual surface air temperature to changes to pCO2 (+/−50 ppmv) is not symmetric, which is likely due to the nonlinear response of the cryosphere (snow cover and sea ice extent).

How to cite: Tan, N., Contoux, C., Ramstein, G., Sun, Y., Dumas, C., Sepulchre, P., and Guo, Z.: Modeling a modern-like pCO2 Warm period with two versions of IPSL AOGCM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10560, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10560, 2021.

CL1.18 – Interdisciplinary Tree-Ring Research

EGU21-10423 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Developmental and environmental factors driving xylem anatomy and micro-density

Annie Deslauriers, Valentinà Buttò, Fabrizio Cartenì, Sergio Rossi, and Hubert Morin

The current research on the dynamics of tree ring formation in conifers has provided new insights into how rate and duration xylem-cell production and development control the size of the xylem conduits leading to the formation of earlywood and latewood. So far, the physiology behind wood formation processes and the associated kinetics has rarely been considered, leading to the impossibility to grasp the drivers of wood density changes along the tree-rings. Despite the importance of wood density for carbon sequestration and tree hydraulics, little is known about the factors controlling variations in wood density across the tree ring, i.e. micro-density, at the intra-annual scale. We first developed a process-based mechanistic model that simulates the development of conifer tracheids from a simple sugar signal that we discuss together with the main kinetics and environmental variables leading to the formation of micro-density in black spruce, the main conifers species in the boreal forest of Canada. At the beginning of the growing season, low sugar availability in the cambium results in slow wall deposition that allows for a lengthier enlargement time thus producing large cells with thin walls (i.e. earlywood). In late summer and early autumn, high sugar availability produces narrower cells with thick cell walls (i.e. latewood). Wood formation dynamics had an indirect effect on micro-density. Micro-density increased under longer periods of cell wall deposition and shorter durations of enlargement. Cell diameter indirectly affected micro-density via cell wall thickness, which was the most important parameter affecting micro-density. Cell traits experienced the joint action of enlargement and secondary wall deposition in shaping the intra-annual patterns of tree rings. Our results point to the predictive power of a simple sugar signal. During the growing season, the amount of carbon allocated to wood formation largely influences the duration of cell differentiation, thus modulating cell diameter, cell wall thickness and by result tree-ring micro-density.

 

How to cite: Deslauriers, A., Buttò, V., Cartenì, F., Rossi, S., and Morin, H.: Developmental and environmental factors driving xylem anatomy and micro-density, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10423, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10423, 2021.

EGU21-2095 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Blocking phloem transport triggers bimodal radial growth in Pinus sylvestris at a xeric site

Walter Oberhuber, Anton Landlinger-Weilbold, Andreas Gruber, and Gerhard Wieser

A bimodal radial grow pattern, i.e. growth peaks in spring and autumn, was repeatedly found in trees in Mediterranean regions, where summer drought causes reduction or cessation of cambial activity. In a dry inner Alpine valley of the Eastern Alps (Tyrol, Austria, c. 750 m asl), which is characterized by drought periods at the start of the growing season in spring and more favorable conditions during summer, Pinus sylvestris shows an unimodal growth pattern with onset and cessation of cambial activity in early April and late June, respectively. Although xylem cell differentiation (cell wall thickening) may last until end of August, a resumption of cambial activity after intense summer rainfall was not observed in this region. In a field experiment we therefore tested the hypothesis that early cessation of cambial activity under drought is an adaptation to limited water availability during the growing season (April through June), leading to an early and irreversible switch of carbon (C) allocation to belowground. To accomplish this, the C status of c. 20 year old Pinus sylvestris saplings (mean stem height 1.5 m) was manipulated at a xeric site by physical blockage of phloem transport (girdling) in mid-July (doy 199), i.e. c. four weeks after cessation of cambial cell division. The influence of manipulated C availability on radial growth was continuously recorded by stem dendrometers, which were mounted 5 cm above girdling. In response to blockage of phloem flow, resumption of radial growth was detected above the girdling zone after about 2 weeks, i.e., bimodal growth could be triggered above girdling by increasing C availability. Although the experimentally induced second growth surge lasted for the same period as in spring (i.e., c. 2 months), the increment was more than twice as large. Below girdling radial growth was not affected (i.e., no reactivation of cambial activity occurred), but cell wall thickness of last latewood cells was significantly reduced indicating lack of C after girdling. Intense radial growth resumption in Pinus sylvestris saplings after girdling indicates that cessation of stem cambial activity can be reversed by manipulating the C status of the stem suggesting a high belowground C demand on the drought-prone, nutrient deficient site. This work highlights the need of in-depth experimental studies in order to understand the impact of endogenous and exogenous factors on cambial activity more clearly.

The research was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF; project number P25643-B16).

How to cite: Oberhuber, W., Landlinger-Weilbold, A., Gruber, A., and Wieser, G.: Blocking phloem transport triggers bimodal radial growth in Pinus sylvestris at a xeric site, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2095, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2095, 2021.

EGU21-10269 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Using tracheid isometry to upscale water transport from pit to tree-rings

Patrick Fonti, Eugene A. Vaganov, Marina V. Fonti, and Irina V. Sviderskaya

Assessing the characteristic of water transport in wood is challenged by the complexity of its tissue composed by numerous different-sized and interconnected conduits. Current methods for measuring conductivity or flow resistance performed on a piece of wood usually have no direct link to the anatomy of the single conduits. Thus, despite the large application of these assessment for ecological studies, this integrated tissue-level approach hampers the possibility to extend the hydraulic assessment across time by using dated series of tree rings.

In this contribution we make use of tracheid versus pit isometry to propose a new hydraulic model merging existing morphological-based components of tracheid hydraulic to upscale water transport properties across time and environments. By using linear relations between tracheid dimeter and pit size as described in the literature, we applied our model to tracheids of increasing size to show that our assessments of the pit and tracheid resistances match with estimations performed in independent studies. We then apply the model to tracheid anatomical measurements from Larix sibirica tree-rings (from 1986 to 2015) formed under harsh conditions in southern Siberia to show the potential to reconstruct hydraulic properties across tree-rings and to quantify their intra- and inter-annual variability.

The proposed model (see 10.1093/jxb/eraa595 for more details on the performed study) not only provide means to derive realistic conduits hydraulic properties via accessible measures of cross-sectional tracheid size, but it also allows assessing how different-sized tracheid’s components contribute to the overall hydraulic properties. In particular, our up-scaled results from the study case with trees from Southern Siberia showed that the natural inter- and intra-ring anatomical variations had a substantial impact on the ring hydraulic properties and can consequently be applied to assess the impact of cell structural characteristics on the hydraulic functioning of trees.

We therefore conclude that this model, despite its early developmental stage, has the potential to provides a novel basis to investigate xylem structure-function relations across time and environmental conditions.

How to cite: Fonti, P., Vaganov, E. A., Fonti, M. V., and Sviderskaya, I. V.: Using tracheid isometry to upscale water transport from pit to tree-rings, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10269, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10269, 2021.

EGU21-6405 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Intra-annual wood anatomical variability in European beech in response to elevation, management and climate in the Central Apennines, Italy

Jose Carlos Miranda, Chiara Calderaro, Claudia Cocozza, Bruno Lasserre, Roberto Tognetti, and Georg von Arx

European beech (Fagus sylvatica) is a widespread and economically important temperate tree species in Europe. Expected future warmer temperatures and severe drought events, especially in Mediterranean areas, could affect vitality and productivity of beech stands that historically were under intensive management in those areas. In this study, we aim to address the lack of knowledge on intra-annual wood anatomical responses of beech to environmental variability and silvicultural practices by investigating three beech stands along an elevational gradient (1200 to 1950 m a.s.l.) in the Apennines (Italy). Several wood cell anatomical features were quantified on increment cores collected from five trees per stand. Results showed that high-elevation trees are hydraulically limited, and mid-elevation trees meet their hydraulic requirements with a different anatomical setup/configuration compared to low and high sites. Maximum xylem vessel size and theoretical hydraulic conductivity were associated with the temperatures of previous summer, previous winter and current summer as well as precipitation at the onset of radial growth and at time of maximum growth rates. Cessation of coppicing did not trigger main intra-annual differences in wood anatomical traits. Similarly, years with extreme climate (e.g. mean temperature and/or precipitation values above or below one standard deviation) did not have strong effects on intra-annual wood anatomical traits, maybe due to buffering through the several active sapwood rings present in beech. In conclusion, elevation had a higher impact on intra-annual wood anatomical traits in the studied trees than either cessation of silvicultural practices or years with extreme climate.

How to cite: Miranda, J. C., Calderaro, C., Cocozza, C., Lasserre, B., Tognetti, R., and von Arx, G.: Intra-annual wood anatomical variability in European beech in response to elevation, management and climate in the Central Apennines, Italy, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6405, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6405, 2021.

EGU21-9278 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Intra-annual climatic signal in tree rings of Larix sp. based on the Vaganov-Shashkin model output

Marina Fonti, Olga Churakova (Sidorova), and Ivan Tychkov

Air temperature increase and change in precipitation regime have a significant impact on northern forests leading to the ambiguous consequences due to the complex interaction between the ecosystem plant components and permafrost. One of the major interests in such circumstances is to understand how tree growth of the main forest species of the Siberian North will change under altering climatic conditions. In this work, we applied the process-based Vaganov-Shashkin model (VS - model) of tree growth in order to estimate the daily impact of climatic conditions on tree-ring width of larch trees in northeastern Yakutia (Larix cajanderi Mayr.) and eastern Taimyr (Larix gmelinii Rupr. (Rupr.) for the period 1956-2003, and to determine the extent to which the interaction of climatic factors (temperature and precipitation) is reflected in the tree-ring anatomical structure. Despite the location of the study sites in the harsh conditions of the north, and temperature as the main limiting factor, it was possible to identify a period during the growing season when tree growth was limited by lack of soil moisture. The application of the VS-model for the studied regions allowed establishing in which period of the growing season the water stress is most often manifest itself, and how phenological phases (beginning, cessation, and duration of larch growth) vary among the years.

The research was funded by RFBR, Krasnoyarsk Territory and Krasnoyarsk Regional Fund of Science, project number 20-44-240001 and by the Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education (projects FSRZ-2020-0010).

How to cite: Fonti, M., Churakova (Sidorova), O., and Tychkov, I.: Intra-annual climatic signal in tree rings of Larix sp. based on the Vaganov-Shashkin model output, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9278, 2021.

EGU21-9804 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Relationships between wood anatomical traits and climate conditions at three beech forest sites in Slovenia

Domen Arnič, Jožica Gričar, Jernej Jevšenak, Gregor Božič, Georg von Arx, and Peter Prislan

It is uncertain how European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) will perform under climate change. Several dendroclimatological studies suggest that increasing temperature will positively affect radial increments at sites optimal for its growth. However, it is not entirely clear how changing growth conditions will affect wood anatomy and thus wood properties. The aim of this study was therefore to analyse the relationships between climate conditions (temperature and precipitation) and wood anatomical traits in beech trees growing at optimal beech forest sites in Slovenia. Three forest sites representing the main Slovenian beech provenances were selected (Idrija, Javorniki, and Mašun). At each site, 16 increment cores were collected in 2016 and subsequently prepared for observation under the light microscope. Image analysis software (Image Pro-Plus and Roxas) were used for quantitative wood anatomy. Mean vessel area, vessel density, and relative conductive area were analysed in tree rings between 1960-2016. Furthermore, tree rings were divided into four quarters to assess the intra-annual variability in vessel features also in relation to weather conditions. The preliminary results indicated that there was a significant difference in tree-ring widths as well as in vessel features among the selected forest sites. Idrija, the late flushing provenance, had the narrowest tree rings, the highest vessel density and relative conductive area, and smallest mean vessel area. The other two sites had a similar mean vessel area, while the widest tree-ring width and the smallest vessel density and relative conductive area were observed at Mašun (the mid-flushing provenance). The response of tree-ring width and vessel features to changing climate conditions differed among sites/provenance. Tree-ring widths at Idrija and Javornik were positively affected by late winter temperature, while tree-ring widths at Mašun were mostly affected by summer precipitation. In the case of vessel features, the highest correlations with climate data were observed in the fourth quarter of the rings with late summer temperature and precipitation. In conclusion, early spring temperatures and summer precipitation proved to be the most important climatic factors affecting beech growth and vessel features.

How to cite: Arnič, D., Gričar, J., Jevšenak, J., Božič, G., von Arx, G., and Prislan, P.: Relationships between wood anatomical traits and climate conditions at three beech forest sites in Slovenia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9804, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9804, 2021.

EGU21-15323 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Direct and indirect effects of environmental limitations on white spruce xylem anatomy at treeline

Timo Pampuch, Mario Trouillier, Alba Anadon-Rosell, Jelena Lange, and Martin Wilmking

Treeline ecosystems are of great scientific interest to study the direct and indirect influence of limiting environmental conditions on tree growth. However, tree growth is complex and multidimensional, and its responses to the environment depend on a large number of abiotic and biotic factors and their interactions.

In this study, we analyze the growth and xylem anatomy of white spruce trees (Picea glauca [Moench] Voss) from three treelines in Alaska (one warm and drought-limited, and two cold and temperature-limited treelines). We hypothesized (1) no difference between the treelines regarding the relationship between tree DBH and height, yet in general (2) faster growing trees at the warmer site. Additionally, we expected to find differences in xylem anatomical traits with trees from the drought-limited site having adapted to drought conditions by (3) forming smaller lumen diameter due to water deficit but (4) a higher xylem anatomical density due to higher temperatures and a longer vegetation period.

Regarding growth in height and diameter, trees at the drought-limited treeline grew relatively (1) taller and (2) faster compared to trees at the temperature-limited treelines. Raw xylem anatomical measurements showed (3) smaller lumen diameters and (4) higher density in trees at the drought-limited treeline. However, using linear mixed-effect models, we found that (i) traits related to water transport like lumen diameter were not significantly correlated with the actual amount of precipitation during the vegetation period but with tree height. We also found that (ii) traits related to mechanical support like density were mainly positively influenced by the mean temperature during the vegetation period.

The differences in lumen diameter found in the raw data can be explained by differences in the growth rates of the trees, since lumen diameter at the lower part of the tree stem needs to increase over time with increasing tree height. The greater wood density at the drought-limited treeline is probably caused by the higher temperature that leads to more biomass production, and potentially longer vegetation periods.

Our study shows that xylem anatomical traits in white spruce can be directly and indirectly controlled by environmental conditions. While lumen diameter is not directly influenced by environmental conditions but indirectly through tree height, other traits like anatomical density show a direct correlation with environmental conditions. Our results highlight the importance of approaching tree growth in a multidimensional way and considering direct and indirect effects of environmental forcing.

How to cite: Pampuch, T., Trouillier, M., Anadon-Rosell, A., Lange, J., and Wilmking, M.: Direct and indirect effects of environmental limitations on white spruce xylem anatomy at treeline, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15323, 2021.

EGU21-9969 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Effects of dominant moss species on shrub growth and xylem anatomy along a precipitation gradient in the subarctic tundra

Alba Anadon-Rosell, Anders Michelsen, Signe Lett, Ellen Dorrepaal, Georg von Arx, Jan Tumajer, and Martin Wilmking

In the tundra, bryophytes may be the dominant growth form covering the soil surface of shrub communities. They can modulate soil conditions through their capacity to retain moisture and nutrients and their chemical characteristics. The study of the interaction between shrubs and bryophytes is essential to understand the functioning of these shrub communities, which are expanding due to global change. In this study, we collected Betula nana and Empetrum hermaphroditum ramets growing in moss carpets dominated by Hylocomium splendens, Pleurozium schreberi or Sphagnum spp., which differ in growth habit, density of their carpets and water holding capacity, amongst others. We sampled three ramets per site and moss species in eight locations distributed along a precipitation gradient (571-1155 mm/year) in the subarctic alpine tundra near Abisko, Sweden. To investigate structural and functional responses to the dominant moss species and precipitation regime, we prepared microscopic sections of the shrubs stem base and measured growth rings and xylem anatomical parameters (vessel lumen area, vessel density and grouping, and theoretical hydraulic conductivity). We also measured shrub leaf C and N concentration and isotope composition (δ13C, δ15N). To understand moss effects on soil characteristics along the precipitation gradient, we measured soil pH and water and nutrient content (nitrate, ammonium, phosphate, dissolved organic C and dissolved organic N). Preliminary results on shrub leaf physiology and soil characteristics show a significant interaction between moss species and the precipitation gradient, indicating that mosses modulate the effects of climate conditions on shrubs. We discuss the importance of moss species combined with the precipitation regime for the performance of tundra shrubs in the context of a changing climate.

How to cite: Anadon-Rosell, A., Michelsen, A., Lett, S., Dorrepaal, E., von Arx, G., Tumajer, J., and Wilmking, M.: Effects of dominant moss species on shrub growth and xylem anatomy along a precipitation gradient in the subarctic tundra, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9969, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9969, 2021.

EGU21-7619 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Elemental levels in twenty environmental matrices and temporal trends in normally and declining trees growth from Copsa Mica, Romania

Constantin Nechita, Andreea Maria Iordache, Tomas Pluhacek, Karel Lemr, Tom Levanič, Oana Romina Botoran, Ramona Zgavarogea, Roxana Elena Ionete, and Ciprian Dumitru Musca

Modern society faced significant challenges in the last decades as a result of environmental pollution and climate change. The current study's objective was to establish a pattern for assimilating HM in normally and declined Quercus robur L. trees. Also, was identify the present state and historical changes in heavy metal elemental composition using different approaches: i) twenty matrices including water, soil, sediments, mushrooms, acorn, leaves, branches, bark and wood; ii) tree-rings elemental time-series trends. Our research of elemental distribution in pedunculate oak earlywood tree-rings brings new viewpoints for investigating chronic decline and dieback using (LA-ICP-MS), (ICP-MS) and (AAS) technics. Impressive amounts of heavy metals in the background environment, especially in water and mushrooms indicate high environmental risk for human health. The Levene's t-test shows significant differences (p-value<0.001) between the analysed matrices' heavy metal concentration. Infertile seeds had a superior concentration of metals in acorn core and lower in acorn pericarp and opposite ratio being observed for healthy ones. We noted the above concentration of high susceptibility elements related to past reports in the study area assigned to the climate-induced changes in temperature and evapotranspiration. In our present state of knowledge, is the first study indicating high variability of heavy metals in tree-rings explained through the individual typology of assimilating elements under different phases of trees decline. The Levene's t-test shows significant differences (p-value<0.001) between decreased and normally growing ring-width chronologies (EW, LW, and RW) only for 1960-2019. Overall declined, and normally increasing trees coexist in sites with heavy pollution, mentioning those with decline are less sensitive to environmental factors. We noted different patterns of responses to climatic factors for trees affected and unaffected by decline growth. Generally, oak trees correlated significantly with water from the soil and negative with temperature and evapotranspiration in spring. Also, it can be stated that heavy metals from tree rings indicate a significant relationship with drought effects and trends for several elemental time series increasing after 1980. Heavy metals correlated strongly between theme indicating similar uptake pathways in trees, respectively from the soil and common origins from industrial activities. Changes in the NDVI indices were strongly correlated with heavy metals from tree-rings highlighting the shift in trees phenology induced by decline.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Romanian National Authority for Scientific Research and Innovation, Contract No. 12N/2019 (PN 19070502 "Evaluation by transdisciplinary techniques of the oak trees decline affected by actual environmental changes in the extra-Carpathian area – adaptation, mitigation and risks") and Contract No. 9N/2019 (PN 19110303" Advanced techniques for identifying sources of contamination and biochemical reactions in aquatic ecosystems" and PN19110302 "Research on the variation trends specific to stable isotopes in different tree species: deepening the fractionation mechanisms and the chemical processes interconnected on the soil-water-plant chain"), partially by CRESFORLIFE ID_40_380 - Subsidiary contract S16/2020.

How to cite: Nechita, C., Iordache, A. M., Pluhacek, T., Lemr, K., Levanič, T., Botoran, O. R., Zgavarogea, R., Ionete, R. E., and Musca, C. D.: Elemental levels in twenty environmental matrices and temporal trends in normally and declining trees growth from Copsa Mica, Romania, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7619, 2021.

EGU21-5077 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Calcium [Ca] tracers using X-Ray fluorescence (XRF) as a potential high throughput measurement technique in ringless highly diverse tropical ecosystems.

Koen Hufkens, Solenn Reguer, Camille Rivard, Jan Van den Bulcke, Hans Beeckman, Tom De Mil, and Lisa Wingate

Our understanding of plant responses to climate change, and their feedbacks to the climate system, rely heavily on consistent long-term observations. Yet, measuring tropical plant species is particularly demanding and results in a lack of spatial and temporal coverage to build relationships between forest dynamics and climatology in the central Congo Basin. Here dendrochronology and wood chemical analyses might provide important ecophysiological information addressing this knowledge gap, especially in tropical forests where the lack of a pronounced seasonality often makes it difficult to discern variability in xylem cell size and density. Conventional optical dendrochronology measurements therefore have strong limitations within these ecosystems, however chemical and elemental analysis can provide additional information. For example, seasonal fluctuations in the carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) stable isotope composition of cellulose is linked to variations in local climate and changes in physiological function. A fewstudies have shown that intra-annual and inter-annual variations in the content of calcium [Ca] in tropical tree rings can be used to age tropical trees without rings, constraining estimates of biomass accumulation. Other studies have linked calcium accumulation in different plant organs to the rate of transpiration in trees making it a powerful predictor of inter-annual variability in rainfall for monsoon regions and a strong novel proxy for drought stress.

Here we present the first results of X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) measurements conducted at the SOLEIL synchrotron and analysis of [Ca] and [Sr], combined with ancillary data such as anatomical, stable isotope and climatological measurements for three tropical tree species. Most species show variability in calcium corresponding to previous proxy measurements, corroborating previous results and showing the potential of non-destructive XRF measurements of wood samples in support of ecophysiological research. The potential of high throughput scanning, in contrast to stable isotope measurements, opens possibilities to gather data on the large scale required to understand diverse tropical forest ecosystems and their responses to (drought) disturbances.

How to cite: Hufkens, K., Reguer, S., Rivard, C., Van den Bulcke, J., Beeckman, H., De Mil, T., and Wingate, L.: Calcium [Ca] tracers using X-Ray fluorescence (XRF) as a potential high throughput measurement technique in ringless highly diverse tropical ecosystems., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5077, 2021.

Trees can provide annual records of ecosystem changes connected with human activity over several decades. These changes can be recorded in the pattern of variation of tree-rings widths and in the variation in the elemental composition of wood. Analysis of trace metal pollution is based on the assumption that element concentrations in tree foliage and tree rings represent element availability in the environment.

We determined the chemical composition of pine needles and annual tree rings to monitor environmental contamination in an urban forest environment in the most industrialized part of southern Poland.

The concentrations of trace elements (Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Pb) and the Pb isotope composition were measured in needles from Pinus sylvestris L. growing in nine urban forests near five factories. Trace elemental concentration and Pb isotope ratio were determined by ICP-MS and MC-ICP-MS, respectively. The needles were characterized based on the concentrations of Cr, ranging from 0.05 to 0.7 mg/kg, Co, from 0.005 to 0.075 mg/kg, Ni, from 0.12 to 0.66 mg/kg, Cu, from 0.49 to 1.0 mg/kg, Zn, from 3.9 to 14 mg/kg, and Pb, from 0.06 to 0.53 mg/kg. The 208Pb/206Pb ratio ranged from 2.08 to 2.11 and the 206Pb/207Pb ratio between 1.15 and 1.17. The heterogeneity of Pb isotope ratio indicates that there are different sources affecting the Pb isotopic composition of pine needles (Sensuła et al., 2021).

In one of the investigated site, a radial trace-element profiles were determined by Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (Laser ablation: New Wave Research UP-193 FX Fast Excimer, ICP-MS: Thermo Scientific X-Series2 with CCT -Collision Cell Technology) at Royal Museum for Central Africa (Belgium). LA-ICP-MS provides a repeatable, minimally destructive, sensitive method for determining many elements in wood tissue, with relatively high spatial resolution.Temporal variations of element concentration (median) in annual tree-rings of pines were compared with time series of wet deposition of pollutant and air pollutant concentration in the investigated area. The similar trends of magnitudes changes can be observed between analysed elements concentration (Na, Mg, Fe, Ni, Zn) and total wet deposition of these elements in the environment during vegetation period or these elements concentration in the rain (Sensuła et al. 2017). 

Different space-time patterns of element accumulation in pine needles and annaul tree rings were observed. The variation in isotopic composition reflects a mix between different anthropogenic sources.

 

References:

Sensuła, B., Wilczyński, S., Monin, L., Allan, M., Pazdur, A., & Fagel, N. (2017). Variations of tree ring width and chemical composition of wood of pine growing in the area nearby chemical factories, Geochronometria, 44(1), 226-239. doi: https://doi.org/10.1515/geochr-2015-0064

Sensuła, B., Fagel, N., & Michczyński, A. (2021). Radiocarbon, trace elements and pb isotope composition of pine needles from a highly industrialized region in southern Poland. Radiocarbon, 1-14. doi:10.1017/RDC.2020.132

How to cite: Sensuła, B. and Fagel, N.: Trace elements and Pb isotope composition of annual tree rings and pine needles growing in highly industrialized region in southern Poland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9587, 2021.

EGU21-10031 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Tracking atmospheric carbon emissions in southern Ontario, Canada using dendrochronological records

Michael Pisaric, Carley Crann, and Felix Vogel

Records of environmental change are often temporally short, perhaps spanning a few decades.  For many environmental issues impacting the world today, we have very limited observations or data concerning those changes.  Therefore, we need to supplement the short observational and instrumental records of environmental change with proxy data sources.  Tree-ring growth records are one type of proxy data source that can be examined at annual timescales to track changes in the environment across longer periods than afforded by relatively short observations and instrumental data records.  Changes in the composition of some gases in the atmosphere, are one example of environmental change that can be elucidated using tree-ring records.  Trees utilize various forms of carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, including radiocarbon (14C).  Naturally, 14C in the atmosphere varies through time due to cosmic ray flux and ocean-atmosphere dynamics.  The concentration of 14C also varies due to anthropogenic activities, including burning of fossil fuels, nuclear bomb testing, and the operation of nuclear power plants (NPPs).  Tree rings record atmospheric 14C concentration during the growing season and are an effective tool to trace 14C in the atmosphere from a variety of sources, including NPPs.

In Southern Ontario, Canada there are 15 operational CANDU reactors at three NPPs (Bruce (8), Darlington (1) and Pickering (6)).  Southern Ontario is also one of the most densely populated regions of Canada and is a major source of fossil fuel derived carbon that is depleted in 14C. Monitoring of atmospheric 14C in Ontario is conducted at the Centre for Atmospheric Research Experiments, operated by Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC).  The facility is considered a clean air site, located approximately halfway between the Bruce and Darlington NPPs. 

We measured the Δ14C in tree rings from white spruce (Picea glauca) trees sampled across a west-east geographic transect between the NPPs with the aim of better understanding how the atmospheric concentration of 14C has varied locally in this region, while also attempting to pinpoint sources of 14C emissions. Data from our clean-air sites track globally derived 14C data from the  Jungfraujoch clean-air atmospheric sampling site in Switzerland.  Tree-ring 14Cmeasurements from our most densely populated site near the city of Toronto are depleted in 14C, reflecting fossil fuel combustion. Conversely, 14C measurements at our site nearest the Pickering and Darlington NPPs are the most enriched. Our results give insight into how tree rings record 14C and how well they compare to established atmospheric sampling techniques. 

How to cite: Pisaric, M., Crann, C., and Vogel, F.: Tracking atmospheric carbon emissions in southern Ontario, Canada using dendrochronological records, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10031, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10031, 2021.

EGU21-14041 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Effects of SO2 emissions in Alberta, Canada on lodgepole pine climate-growth relationships

Devon Earl, Ann-Lise Norman, and Mary Reid

The growth response of trees to climate can be altered by other environmental changes that a tree may face including pollution or fertilization. In this study, the effect of spatial and temporal patterns sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions on climate-growth relationships of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) in two areas of Alberta, Canada was assessed. Twenty tree cores were collected in each of four stands per study area: two near a source of SO2 emissions (sour gas processing facility) and two far from the source of emissions. To select important climate variables, the average standardized tree ring width of all trees in each area were first compared to monthly average temperature and total precipitation variables. For each important climate variable, response function analysis was conducted between standardized tree ring widths and climate in each of three SO2 exposure time periods: a period pre-dating any emissions, a period of high emissions, and a more recent period of reduced emissions. Linear mixed models were used to compare response coefficients of tree ring widths to climate between exposure space (near or far from the source of emissions) and exposure time (no emissions, high emissions, reduced emissions) and the interaction between them. The absolute values of predicted ring widths in each exposure space and exposure time in each area were used as a response variable in a linear mixed effects model to assess the effects of SO2 exposure on the magnitude of tree growth response to climate. SO2 exposure time was a significant term in all climate-growth relationship models. Exposure space was significant in 13 out of 20 models, and the interaction between exposure time and exposure space was significant in 14 out of 20 models. The effects of exposure time and exposure space on climate-growth relationships were not consistent between climate variables. Overall, tree growth responded most strongly to climate in the high exposure time period. The increase in magnitude of climate-growth relationships in the high SO2 exposure time period may indicate that trees stressed by sulfur deposition are not able to buffer the effects of climate, and are more susceptible to extreme weather conditions such as drought. However, the response to climate during the high emission period was greater far from the source of emissions than near the source of emissions; This could be because the historical addition of lime to stands near the sour gas processing facilities resulted in less sulfur stress. SO2 emissions in Alberta may alter climate-growth relationships of lodgepole pine.  

How to cite: Earl, D., Norman, A.-L., and Reid, M.: Effects of SO2 emissions in Alberta, Canada on lodgepole pine climate-growth relationships, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14041, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14041, 2021.

EGU21-5365 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Tree-rings δ13C different responses to environmental factors in angiosperms and gymnosperms at global scale

Xiaozhen Li, Guo Chen, Wenyi Qin, Peng Wang, and Xiang Wang

Tree-rings, was an extraordinary information base of climate. The global climatic change has been modifying ecosystem, it is important to understand mechanism of how plants respond to climate change. The carbon isotope composition of tree-rings corrected to the value before industrial revolution (δ13Cring) can provide climatic information and carbon and water balance relationship of plants. However, it was still a challenge to disentangle the influence of different environmental parameters on δ13Cring among different tree types. We collected published data of δ13Cring from published papers and study how angiosperms and gymnosperms responsed to different environmental parameters. The results showed that the δ13Cring of angiosperms and gymnosperms were significantly different and there was a decrasing trend in δ13Cring of angiosperms and gymnosperms. In this study, we found that atmospheric concentration (Ca) was not the mainly factor to influence the δ13Cring, and the MAT and PRE were the most important environmental parameters to influence the decreasing trend of δ13Cring for angiosperms and gymnosperms, respectively. Additionally, the global isoscapes of δ13Cring were not established, in this study, three machine learning methods to predict the spatial distribution of δ13Cring were done, the results showed that RF was the best model to established the isoscapes of δ13Cring.

How to cite: Li, X., Chen, G., Qin, W., Wang, P., and Wang, X.: Tree-rings δ13C different responses to environmental factors in angiosperms and gymnosperms at global scale, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5365, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5365, 2021.

EGU21-14429 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Can hydrogen isotopes ratios in plants be used to inform the metabolic consequences of C allocation patterns

Ansgar Kahmen, Kerstin Treydte, and Meisha Holloway-Phillips

All hydrogen in plant compounds derives from plant water; however, fractionation and isotopic exchange with local tissue water theoretically occurs in the synthesis of sucrose, and during downstream metabolic steps before the eventual synthesis of cellulose in sink tissue. The net result is that the relationship between the hydrogen isotope composition (d2H) of cellulose and plant water may be weak. Whilst isotopic exchange and biosynthetic fractionation complicate our ability to recover the hydroclimate signal, the potential for d2H variation to provide information on plant metabolic responses to environment is gaining traction.

 

Not all the fractionation factors associated with metabolic reactions are known for hydrogen, and even if they were, the apparent isotopic effect is dependent on the flux through the pathway. However, some generalisations have been made: 1) triose phosphate from the Calvin cycle is proposed to have a d2H lower than leaf water due to the transfer of hydrogen from NADPH to glyceradehyde-3-phosphate being highly 2H-depleted; 2) as plant water is enriched compared with primary photosynthetic products, isotopic exchange with water will generally result in a 2H-enrichment of downstream sugars; and, 3) the more times sugars pass through fractionating reactions, the more enriched the resulting sugar pool has been hypothesised to become. This has led to two general hypotheses relating to plant C-use: 1) when sink demand for sugars is low compared with source availability, the residence time of sugars in sink cells may increase leading to greater isotopic exchange. In other words, cellulose would be relatively 2H-enriched under high vs under low source-to-sink ratio; and 2) long-term starch stores may be 2H-enriched relative to current assimilates, assuming starch undergoes greater isotopic exchange prior to being stored or reflecting on-going metabolic exchange between local sugar-starch pools in parenchyma cells. In other words, cellulose would be relatively 2H-enriched where the contribution of stored C compared to current assimilates to cellulose synthesis, is greater.

 

To test these ideas, we are currently investigating how d2H varies inter-annually and vertically within mature trees of Fagus sylvatica and Picea abies collected at the Canopy Crane Site II, Hölstein, Switzerland. Assessment is initially being made in samples collected from the top and base of the main stem as well as in collar roots, for the years 2017, 2018 and 2019. Previous studies have observed that under water-stress conditions, C allocation below the canopy can be reduced. The summer of 2018 was exceptionally hot and dry; thus, we anticipate that the inter-annual d2H patterns will contrast by vertical position, particularly in 2018 compared with 2017 and 2019. Relative changes in the vertical distribution of C will be determined through assessment of the tree-ring width and circumference. For a direct appraisal of hypothesis 2, we are currently developing analytical capacity to measure the d2H of plant extracted sucrose and starch.

How to cite: Kahmen, A., Treydte, K., and Holloway-Phillips, M.: Can hydrogen isotopes ratios in plants be used to inform the metabolic consequences of C allocation patterns, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14429, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14429, 2021.

EGU21-12943 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18 | Highlight

Jet stream position connected to atmospheric blocking drives regional anomalies in European forest productivity

Isabel Dorado-Liñán, Blanca Ayarzagüena, Guobao Xu, and Valerie Trouet

European forests stock 30% of the total carbon stored in the biomass of temperate forests globally. As essential components of the biosphere, these forests are highly influenced by land–atmosphere interactions and climate extremes that may alter carbon uptake and storage. In order to identify broad patterns of ecosystem responses to climate, changes in European forest productivity have been linked to the strength and phase (i.e., positive or negative) of large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. However, a robust characterization of the physical coupling between ocean-atmosphere variability and terrestrial ecosystem productivity requires a more tangible and physically measurable representation of the atmospheric state. We propose that the latitudinal position of the jet-stream in the European-Atlantic sector (JSL) is such a measure and allows directly linking anomalies in terrestrial carbon fluxes with climate extremes. Importantly, JSL integrates not only co-variability between multiple climate parameters, but also the underlying atmospheric configuration.

In this study, we combine a network of 344 tree-ring width (TRW) chronologies, simulated ecosystem carbon uptake (i.e., gross primary production; GPP) from Dynamic Global Vegetation Models and atmospheric reanalysis data to characterize the spatiotemporal connection between forest productivity at the earth surface and summer JSL variability in the upper troposphere. The focus on extremes in both the atmospheric driver (JSL) and the ecosystem response (TRW, GPP) allows us to diagnose the synoptic-scale configuration and climatic fluctuations that trigger the most substantial carbon anomalies across temperate forests in Europe.

The impact of summer JSL migrations on the productivity of European forests is not uniform across the continent and shows a northwest-southeast polarity. Regional tree growth and GPP dipoles across Europe, particularly in extreme years, are tightly coupled to the position of the JSL and the occurrence of persistent and stationary weather patterns connected to persistent and strong anticyclonic anomalies (i.e., atmospheric blocking events). Productivity, and particularly forest growth, are the most impacted by changes in summer JSL over the continent, where atmospheric blocking frequency is the highest during summer. We observed synchronized changes in growth and GPP during summer JSL extremes, denoting common climatic constraints to both processes.

Our study emphasizes that JSL variability can trigger regional changes of up to 30% and 50% during extreme years in forest carbon uptake and growth of European forests, respectively. More importantly, these extremes on productivity are not uniform across Europe resulting in a continental productivity imbalance. Current and future net effect on continental forest productivity may depend on differences in forest resilience, forest density and rate of forest productivity across the continent.

How to cite: Dorado-Liñán, I., Ayarzagüena, B., Xu, G., and Trouet, V.: Jet stream position connected to atmospheric blocking drives regional anomalies in European forest productivity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12943, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12943, 2021.

EGU21-2151 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18 | Highlight

Reconstruction of the Southern Hemisphere climate over the past millennium taking into account explicitly the links between climate and tree growth with process-based dendroclimatic models

Jeanne Rezsöhazy, Hugues Goosse, Joël Guiot, François Klein, and Quentin Dalaiden

Trees are one of the main archives to reconstruct past climate variability at the interannual scale. The links between tree-ring proxies and climate have usually been estimated on the basis of statistical approaches, assuming linear and stationary relationships. Yet, both assumptions can be inadequate. This issue can be overcome by the use of process-based dendroclimatic models. For example, MAIDEN (Modeling and Analysis In DENdroecology) is a mechanistic tree-growth model that simulates tree-ring growth starting from surface air temperature, precipitation and CO2  daily inputs. VS-Lite (Vaganov-Shashkin Lite) is a simplified model that is more generally used in global applications and simulates unitless tree-growth indexes with monthly temperature and precipitation as inputs. In this study, we provide a climate reconstruction of continental temperature, precipitation and winds in the mid to high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere over the last millennium that takes into account explicitly the links between climate and tree growth with process-based dendroclimatic models. To this end, an offline data assimilation procedure is used to combine the information from the physics of the climate system, as included in climate models, and paleoclimate records, in particular tree-ring width and ice cores records (snow accumulation and δ18O). Those records are the best available continental proxies in the Southern Hemisphere continents (South America, Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand and Antarctica) for reconstructing the past climate. MAIDEN and VS-Lite are used here as proxy system models, also referred to as observation operators in data assimilation framework, to make the link between climate model outputs and indirect climate observations from tree-rings. The ice cores records are directly compared to the outputs of the climate model. More specifically, we evaluate the benefits of using tree-growth models such as VS-Lite and MAIDEN for reconstructing past climate with data assimilation compared to the commonly used linear regression.

How to cite: Rezsöhazy, J., Goosse, H., Guiot, J., Klein, F., and Dalaiden, Q.: Reconstruction of the Southern Hemisphere climate over the past millennium taking into account explicitly the links between climate and tree growth with process-based dendroclimatic models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2151, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2151, 2021.

EGU21-9029 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Monthly streamflow reconstruction for the Chao Phraya River Basin with tree rings and δ180

Hung Nguyen, Stefano Galelli, Chenxi Xu, and Brendan Buckley

The Chao Phraya River Basin covers a third of Thailand’s area and is also home to a third of the country’s population. The Chao Phraya River serves multiple purposes: water supply, irrigation, hydropower production, cooling for thermoelectric power plants, among others. Water management in the basin could benefit from long term streamflow records that extend beyond the instrumental period. But to acquire practical relevance, streamflow reconstructions should have a sub-annual resolution—in line with the time step characterizing water management decisions. To this end, we reconstruct 253 years of monthly streamflow at all four major tributaries (Ping, Nan, Yon, and Wang) of the Chao Phraya. The reconstructions are developed using a network of tree rings and δ180 chronologies in Southeast Asia. Importantly, our reconstruction method ensures that the total monthly flow matches the annual flow closely. This mass balance criterion is necessary to avoid misguiding water management decisions, such as the allocation of water rights. All reconstructions are skillful. Better skills are obtained in the pre-monsoon months (March to May) than in the peak monsoon season (September, October). Overall, this work presents the most comprehensive record of high resolution and long term streamflow variability in the basin.

How to cite: Nguyen, H., Galelli, S., Xu, C., and Buckley, B.: Monthly streamflow reconstruction for the Chao Phraya River Basin with tree rings and δ180, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9029, 2021.

EGU21-16404 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

A millennium-long 'Blue Ring' chronology from Bristlecone Pine as a record of volcanic forcing on climate

Liliana Siekacz, Matthew Salzer, Charlotte Pearson, and Marcin Koprowski

The Tree Ring Width (TRW) records are one of the main paleoclimate proxies that estimate the past climate variability. TRW measurements pave the way for scientists to produce sequences from various kinds of trees and reconstruct climate variables over the past years. Understanding the relation between TRW and climate variables in the past would help us analyze climate change events. This study has applied multi-gridded datasets to find the relations and model TRW data with different climate variables in South Korea's northeast. We utilized TRW data related to our case study that is available on the NOAA website; furthermore, we have checked three primary gauges, namely Agmerra (The Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications), CRU TS4.03 (Climatic Research Unit Time-Series version 4.03), and APHRODITE's (Asian Precipitation-Highly-Resolved Observational Data Integration Towards Evaluation) for climate variables. In the first step, we have checked the relation between the gauges' precipitation data and observation TRW. According to the obtained efficiency criteria, CRU performed the best consequences. In the second step, we have tried to model observation TRW as a dependent variable and four climate variables of CRU (precipitation, minimum temperature, potential evapotranspiration, and diurnal temperature range) as independent ones over 1969-1998. We have created a linear regression model and determined the accurate coefficients for each climate variable. Besides, we have examined the observation TRW and modeled TRW data. The results showed that with R2  ≈ 0.40 and a p-value of 0.0323, the regression line was linearly significant at the 95 percent significance level. It represents that our model is acceptable. We will extend our model with Artificial Intelligence methods and try to apply other TRW stations in the future step. In this way, we may produce highly accurate models and fill the gaps for future researches.

How to cite: Salehnia, N. and Ahn, J.: Assessing the relation of tree ring width with climate variables in South Korea through multi-gridded dataset, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3845, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3845, 2021.

EGU21-9237 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Tree ring research in the Himalayas – a key resource for extending environmental records into the pre-instrumental period

Nazimul Islam, Torsten Vennemann, and Stuart N. Lane

Original dendrochronological research has developed rapidly over the last few decades to cover a wide range of environmental reconstruction, not only mean climate conditions but also climate extremes (e.g. floods, droughts) and other environmental hazards (e.g. landslides, debris flows, sea-level rise, volcanic eruptions). Similarly, the focus has expanded its geographical coverage from the temperate and high latitudes to lower latitudes (e.g.  the Himalaya, Tibet Plateau). Analysis of the two main dedicated dendrochronology journals (Dendrochronologia (2002-) and Tree Ring Research (2015-)) shows that the focus of the majority of published papers has been temperate and high latitudes and many fewer have considered lower latitudes such as the Himalaya. This may be due to the long-lasting controversy and doubt of the existence of tree-rings in lower latitude trees and the lower scientific acceptance of seasonal tree growth in such regions. However, such regions have some of the most preferred tree species (e.g. Larix griffithii, Abies spectabilis, Betula utilis, Juniperus polycarpos etc) for dendrochronological analysis making them suitable for tree-ring research and for answering questions regarding century-scale and longer environmental changes in regions with a relatively short history of instrumented recording of environmental parameters.

Perhaps the most interesting development in tree ring research is the realization that tree cellulose can be used to acquire information not only of climatic significance but also hydrological significance, by using environmental isotopes. To date, despite of being one of the most climate and geopolitically sensitive regions, the Himalaya has got very less or no attention for combined research of isotopes and anatomical analysis of tree rings. Based on its huge significance, it is critical to combine these two methods to allow us to make linkages between historical climate fluctuations and associated hydrological response. In this poster, we present the conception of a project to do this in a large catchment (4264 km2) in the Sikkim Himalaya with the purpose to understand how climate change is simultaneously impacting both water-related risks and water-related resources and crucially how far downstream which is highly significant as millions of people living downstream get freshwater from the seasonal snow and glacier-melt in this part of the Himalayas.

How to cite: Islam, N., Vennemann, T., and Lane, S. N.: Tree ring research in the Himalayas – a key resource for extending environmental records into the pre-instrumental period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9237, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9237, 2021.

EGU21-10168 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Dendrochronological potential of the Azorean endemic gymnosperm Juniperus brevifolia (Seub.) Antoine

Diogo C Pavão, Jernej Jevšenak, Ricardo Camarinho, Armindo Rodrigues, Lurdes Borges Silva, Rui B Elias, and Luís Silva

Tree-ring interannual pattern variation is crucial in dendrochronology, allowing the identification of possible limiting factors on growth. Thus, trees exposed to sub-tropical or tropical climates without a marked seasonality, may show a low degree of interannual variation, impeding a straightforward dendroclimatological approach. Meanwhile, subtropical regions, and areas in transitional climates such as the Azores archipelago, are widely unexplored in terms of dendroclimatology, providing opportunities to work with endemic trees, including the dominant Azorean tree Juniperus brevifolia (Seub.) Antoine. To evaluate the dendrochronological potential of J. brevifolia, we analyzed wood anatomy and tree-ring patterns, cross-dating capabilities, and correlation with climate parameters. We sampled 48 individual trees from 2 natural populations (São Miguel and Terceira islands) using an increment borer. In addition, a Trephor tool was used to obtain wood microcores for micro-anatomical analysis. Tree-ring widths were measured with CooRecorder (Cybis) and cross-dated with the PAST-5 software (SCIEM). After detrending, master chronologies were built and correlated with aggregated daily temperature and precipitation data using the dendroTools R package. Microcores were prepared following standard protocols to obtain high resolution images. Our results showed the transition from latewood to earlywood marked by thick-walled fibers, . However, there were also unclear ring transitions or partially indistinct ring boundaries and wedging rings, complicating the cross-dating process. Our preliminary climate-growth correlations indicated significant positive correlations with precipitation at the end of the growing season. Our results suggest an acceptable dendrochronological potential for Juniperus brevifolia, which could be further used in distribution modelling or in recent climatic reconstructions, for which more samples will have to be analyzed.

How to cite: C Pavão, D., Jevšenak, J., Camarinho, R., Rodrigues, A., Borges Silva, L., B Elias, R., and Silva, L.: Dendrochronological potential of the Azorean endemic gymnosperm Juniperus brevifolia (Seub.) Antoine, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10168, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10168, 2021.

EGU21-14895 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Dry-season climate drives interannual variability in tropical tree growth

Pieter Zuidema, Flurin Babst, Peter Groenendijk, and Valerie Trouet

Tropical and subtropical ecosystems are primarily responsible for the large inter-annual variability (IAV) in the global carbon land sink. The response of tropical vegetation productivity to climatic variation likely drives this IAV, but the climate sensitivity of key productivity components are poorly understood. Tree-ring analysis can help fill this knowledge gap by estimating IAV in woody biomass growth, the major carbon accumulation process in tropical vegetation.

 

Here, we evaluate the climate responses of woody biomass growth throughout the global tropics. Using an unprecedented compilation of tropical tree-ring data, we test hypotheses that (1) precipitation (P) and maximum temperature (Tmax) have opposite and additive effects on annual tree growth, (2) these climate responses amplify with increasing aridity and (3) wet-season climate is a more important driver of growth than dry-season climate.

 

We established a network of 347 tree-ring width chronologies compiled from (sub-)tropical latitudes, representing 99 tree species on five continents and obtained from contributors (n=112) and the International Tree-Ring Data Bank (ITRDB; n=235). Our network is climatologically representative for 66% of the pantropical land area with woody vegetation.

 

To test hypotheses we re-developed standardized ring-width index (RWI) chronologies and assessed climate responses using SOM cluster analysis (monthly P and Tmax) and multiple regression analysis (seasonal P and Tmax). Our results were consistent with hypothesis 1: effects of monthly or seasonal P and Tmax on tree growth were indeed additive and opposite, suggesting water availability to be the primary driver of tropical tree growth. In accordance with hypothesis 2, these climate responses were stronger at sites with lower mean annual precipitation or a larger annual water deficit. However, our results contrast those expected under hypothesis 3. Three of the four clusters show a dominant role of dry-season climate on annual tree growth and regression analyses confirmed this strong dry-season role.

 

The strong dry-season effect on tropical tree growth seemingly contrasts the general notion that tropical vegetation productivity peaks during the wet season but is consistent with studies showing that climatologically benign dry seasons increase reserve storage and xylem growth. We posit that dry-season climate constrains the magnitude of woody biomass growth that takes place during the following wet season, and thus contributes to IAV in tree growth.

 

By providing field-based insights on climate sensitivity of tropical vegetation productivity, our study contributes to the major task in Earth system science of quantifying, understanding, and predicting the IAV of the carbon land sink.

How to cite: Zuidema, P., Babst, F., Groenendijk, P., and Trouet, V.: Dry-season climate drives interannual variability in tropical tree growth, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14895, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14895, 2021.

EGU21-7207 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Long-term physiological and growth responses of oak trees under climate warming in eastern Asia

Julieta Gabriela Arco Molina, Kerstin Treydte, Nela Maredova, Matthias Saurer, Jiri Dolezal, Jong-Suk Song, and Jan Altman

Climate changes and raising atmospheric CO2 concentrations are expected to influence tree and forest development. However, the direction and intensity of the tree and forest responses are diverse, and long-term studies are scarce.  Here, we studied responses of Quercus mongolica to climate over the last 117 years based on the tree-ring width, δ13C-derived physiological parameters (Δ13C, Ci and iWUE) and δ18O in Jeju Island, South Korea. Trend and change point analyses were performed to the radial tree growth, physiology and climate, and tree responses-climate relationships were analysed temporally and spatially. iWUE significantly increased since 1900 but decadal variations were observed in 1950, 1975 and 2010, revealing an evolving physiological response. iWUE was mainly driven by stimulated photosynthesis under no water limitations. This photosynthetic stimulation was driven mainly by the atmospheric CO2 fertilization, warming and higher radiation, probably through the simultaneous influence on the phenology and physiology of trees. At a local scale, higher radiation combined with less cloudy conditions were the factors with the greatest positive influence on tree growth, while at a regional scale land and sea surface temperatures positively influenced both tree growth and physiology. Moreover, all these responses strongly intensified after the 1970s, showing that tree responses are not temporary stable. Altogether, the present results indicated that the physiology and growth of Q. mongolica from eastern Asia are driven by a combination of climatic, ecological and anthropogenic factors. Moreover, the significant, rapid and unprecedented changes in the tree responses indicated that trees may benefit from recent global changes, showing a physiology-driven growth enhancement. This represents a key understanding of trees and forests ecosystems responses to future climate changes, which is relevant to assess and design global change mitigation strategies.

How to cite: Arco Molina, J. G., Treydte, K., Maredova, N., Saurer, M., Dolezal, J., Song, J.-S., and Altman, J.: Long-term physiological and growth responses of oak trees under climate warming in eastern Asia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7207, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7207, 2021.

EGU21-13182 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Using tree rings to assess the potential of thinning to alleviate drought stress in a dry forest of western Canada

David Montwé, Audrey Standish, Miriam Isaac-Renton, and Jodi Axelson

Increasing frequency of severe drought events under climate change is a major cause for concern for millions of hectares of forested land. One practical solution to improving forest resilience may be thinning. There may be several potential benefits, chief of which is that drought tolerance could be improved in the remaining trees due to lower competition for resources and increased precipitation throughfall. By improving resilience to drought, this may increase productivity of the remaining trees while lowering risks of mortality. Such potential benefits can effectively be quantified with data from statistically-sound, long-term field experiments, and tree rings provide a suitable avenue to compare treatments. We work with an experiment that applied different levels of tree retention to mature interior Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. glauca) in a dry ecosystem of western Canada. The treatments were applied in the winter of 2002/2003, coinciding with the aftermath of a severe natural drought event in 2002. We used tree-rings to quantify the extent to which thinning improves recovery and resilience of treated trees as compared to non-thinned controls. Tree-ring samples as well as height and diameter data were obtained from 83 trees from 8 treatment units of the randomized experimental design. Indicators for resilience to drought were calculated based on basal area increments. Thinning substantially increased basal area increments at the individual tree level, but more importantly, led to significantly higher recovery and resilience relative to the control. The results of this tree-ring analysis suggest that thinning may be a viable silvicultural intervention to counteract effects of severe drought events and to maintain tree cover.

How to cite: Montwé, D., Standish, A., Isaac-Renton, M., and Axelson, J.: Using tree rings to assess the potential of thinning to alleviate drought stress in a dry forest of western Canada, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13182, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13182, 2021.

EGU21-8635 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

The impact of drought on tree growth in Mediterranean sites

Giovanna Battipaglia, Francesco Niccoli, and Arturo Pacheco-Solana

Climate-induced forest mortality is a critical issue in the Mediterranean basin, with major consequences for the functioning of these key ecosystems. Indeed, in Mediterranean ecosystems, where water stress is already the most limiting factor for tree performance, climatic changes are expected to entail an increase in water deficit. In this context, annual growth rings can provide short- (e.g., years) and long-term (e.g., decades) information on how trees respond to drought events. With climate change, Pinus pinaster and Pinus pinea L. are expected to reduce their distribution range in the region, being displaced at low altitudes by more drought tolerant taxa such as sub Mediterranean Quercus spp.

This study aims was to assess the physiological response of Pinus and Quercus species growing in the Vesuvio National park, located in Southern Italy and where an increase of temperature and drought events has been recorded in the recent years. Our preliminary results underlined the importance of temperature on the tree ring width of all the analyses species. The high temperatures can cause a change in the constant kinetics of the RuBisCo, leading to a consequent decrease in carboxylation rate and thus to a reduction in tree growth. On the other hand, also precipitation seemed to affect the growth of the sampled trees: indeed, in all the chronologies a reduction in growth was found after particular dry years: for example, the low rainfall in 1999 (455 mm/year) determined a drastic decline in growth in 2000 in all the species. In addition to the climatic factors, competition can also play an important role in the growth rate: dendrochronological analyzes have highlighted how stand specific properties (i.e. density, structure and composition) can influence individual tree responses to drought events. The knowledge of those researches should be integrated into sustainable forest management strategies to minimize the potential impacts of climate change on forest ecosystems.

How to cite: Battipaglia, G., Niccoli, F., and Pacheco-Solana, A.: The impact of drought on tree growth in Mediterranean sites, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8635, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8635, 2021.

Latest drought events and their already visible damage to trees highlight the crucial need to assess the current state and resilience of forest ecosystems in southern Germany. However, commonly applied dendroclimatic approaches rarely take into account, how weather patterns affecting trees are modified by topographic conditions. For this purpose, three main tree species were studied at three low mountain ranges and three corresponding basins in the topographically complex province of Bavaria (southeast Germany). A response analysis between climate proxies and tree-ring widths was used to investigate climate-growth relationships over the past 50 years of both coniferous and deciduous tree species at each forest site. Temporal stability of tree responses to climate was compared for two 25-year periods to detect possible modifications in climate-growth correlations. A pointer year analysis was also conducted to analyze tree response to climatic extreme events. The results showed that Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) was the most vulnerable and least drought-resistant of the investigated tree species. Although Norway spruce (Picea abies) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica) benefited from an extended growing season at high elevation sites, they showed higher drought sensitivity over the past 25 years. Beech responses were rather inhomogeneous and even differed in the optimal precipitation period. However, lower correlation coefficients for summer precipitation at the driest site may indicate the ability of beech to adapt to less summer precipitation. Nevertheless, increasing drought frequency, as predicted, poses a serious threat to all studied tree species, including even the colder and more humid sites. Hence, to more accurately estimate risk potentials under future weather conditions, we will combine dendroclimatological results with climate modelling scenarios, particularly expected future frequencies of critical weather types on the local scale.

How to cite: Debel, A. and Bräuning, A.: Current state and resilience of three main tree species in southern Germany with regard to drier and hotter weather conditions over the past 50 years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11087, 2021.

EGU21-13226 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Assessing drought-induced mortality of European beech and Scots pine in the Valais, Switzerland

Sabine Rothenbühler, Lorenz Walthert, Matthias Saurer, Holger Gärtner, Arthur Gessler, Andreas Rigling, Willy Tinner, Karma Tenzin, and Kerstin Treydte

Tree mortality due to climate change and particularly drought is a globally observed issue and has been studied widely. However, the underlying physiological mechanisms are still not fully understood. One approach to assess the drivers of drought-induced mortality is to retrospectively investigate predisposing factors that have led to tree death by utilizing tree rings. Here we combine annual stem growth, and stable carbon and oxygen isotopes (𝛿13C and 𝛿18O) in tree rings of recently died and living trees of two species, drought tolerant Pinus sylvestris and drought sensitive Fagus sylvatica, in the Rhone Valley (Valais), the driest part of Switzerland.

Irrespective of specific drought tolerance, growth patterns of now-dead and living trees were significantly different in both species. Now-dead trees showed higher growth rates than living trees, for at least half of their life span. In the last two decades this pattern was reversed and growth of now-dead trees was at a lower level compared to living trees. In this recent time period, 𝛿18O records of now-dead trees of both species showed a distinct decrease, while no systematic difference was found in the tree-ring 𝛿13C records of now-dead and living trees. Climate correlation analysis revealed that stem growth of now-dead trees was more sensitive to climate compared to living trees and that the relationship between isotope-derived leaf gas exchange and climate weakened in the late period prior to death.

Our findings suggest that now-dead trees followed a more conservative water-use strategy in their declining phase. Decreasing  values and weakened relationships to climate indicate a reduction in stomatal conductance, accompanied by reduced photosynthetic activity, since the ratio of photosynthesis to stomatal conductance remained unchanged. Overall, our results suggest a combination of hydraulic failure and carbon starvation as initiators of tree death at our study sites, probably in different stages of tree life. It is obvious that recent climate conditions already strongly affected the trees, such that in a future environment negative effects will most likely increase.

How to cite: Rothenbühler, S., Walthert, L., Saurer, M., Gärtner, H., Gessler, A., Rigling, A., Tinner, W., Tenzin, K., and Treydte, K.: Assessing drought-induced mortality of European beech and Scots pine in the Valais, Switzerland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13226, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13226, 2021.

EGU21-3299 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Refining the standardized growth change method for pointer year detection: bias-adjustment and definition of the recovery period

Allan Buras, Tom Ovenden, Anja Rammig, and Christian Zang

Detecting pointer years in tree-ring data is a central aspect of extreme-event ecology. Pointer years usually represent extraordinary secondary tree growth, which can often be interpreted as response to extraordinary environmental conditions such as late-frosts or droughts. Identifying pointer-years in larger tree-ring networks and relating those to specific climatic conditions may allow for a deeper understanding of how trees perform under extreme climate and consequently, under anticipated climate change (Meyer et al., 2020; Rehschuh et al., 2017).  

Recently, Buras et al. (2020) demonstrated how frequently used pointer-year detection methods are suboptimal for such large-scale analyses due to an either too low or sometimes too high sensitivity in detecting extraordinary growth. In their study, Buras et al. (2020) proposed a novel approach for detecting pointer years – the standardized growth change (SGC) method. Despite a higher success rate with regards to identifying artificially introduced pointer years in simulated tree-ring data, Buras et al. (2020) concluded that the SGC method could be further refined to capture pointer years following a gradual growth decline. Moreover, they discussed the possibility to incorporate growth changes at higher lags, thereby allowing the duration of the recovery period following a pointer year to be estimated.

Under this framework, we here present a refined version of the SGC-method – the bias-adjusted standardized growth change method (BSGC). The methodological adjustment to the SGC approach incorporates conflated probabilities of time-step specific growth changes with probabilities of time-step independent growth changes. Application of BSGC to simulated and measured tree-ring data indicated a successful bias adjustment which now allows for the identification of pointer years following years of successive growth decline. Moreover, the length of simulated recovery periods was well reproduced and revealed plausible results for existing tree-ring data. Based on these validations, BSGC can be considered a further refinement of pointer-year detection, allowing for a more precise detection and consequently better understanding of the radial growth response of trees to extreme events.

 

Buras, A., Rammig, A., Zang, C.S., 2020. A novel approach for the identification of pointer years. Dendrochronologia 125746. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2020.125746

Meyer, B.F., Buras, A., Rammig, A., Zang, C.S., 2020. Higher susceptibility of beech to drought in comparison to oak. Dendrochronologia 64, 125780. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2020.125780

Rehschuh, R., Mette, T., Menzel, A., Buras, A., 2017. Soil properties affect the drought susceptibility of Norway spruce. Dendrochronologia 45, 81–89. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dendro.2017.07.003

 

How to cite: Buras, A., Ovenden, T., Rammig, A., and Zang, C.: Refining the standardized growth change method for pointer year detection: bias-adjustment and definition of the recovery period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3299, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3299, 2021.

EGU21-5765 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Life after recovery: new insights into post-drought compensatory growth and forest recovery dynamics

Thomas Ovenden, Michael Perks, Toni-Kim Clarke, Maurizio Mencuccini, and Alistair Jump

Large scale losses in forest productivity linked to extreme drought are now being documented globally. With climate change set to increase the frequency, intensity and duration of future extreme events, understanding the impact of drought on forest productivity and the post-drought recovery dynamics of these systems is becoming increasingly important. However, current approaches to quantifying resilience limit our understanding of forest response dynamics, recovery trajectories and drought legacies by constraining and simplifying the temporal scale and resolution of assessment. To advance beyond one of the most commonly used approaches to estimating resilience, we first compared estimates of resilience for Pinus sylvestris trees following an extreme drought by comparing the same resilience index calculated over different pre- and post-drought time scales. We then developed an alternative approach using dynamic regression to capture each individual tree’s relationship between climate and growth, which was then used to forecast tree growth annually for the drought year and nine subsequent years, in a scenario where no drought had occurred. Here we present the results of this work, comparing observed tree growth with growth forecasted using dynamic regression at multiple stem heights and stand densities. This approach allowed us to increase the temporal scale and resolution of resilience assessment and follow tree and stand level growth relative to a no-drought scenario throughout recovery and into a post-recovery phase, where we find evidence for significant compensatory growth. The existence of compensatory growth post-recovery reduced estimates of drought induced losses of radial growth, indicating that current approaches risk underestimating tree and stand resilience to drought and overestimate losses in above-ground biomass. Similarly, we provide evidence for a temporal dependency in the stage during recovery at which pre-drought tree and stand attributes such as growth rates, basal area and stand densities were associated with growth resilience. Our results have wide reaching implications for both forest management targeted at increasing resilience, carbon budgeting and our understanding of drought legacy.

How to cite: Ovenden, T., Perks, M., Clarke, T.-K., Mencuccini, M., and Jump, A.: Life after recovery: new insights into post-drought compensatory growth and forest recovery dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5765, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5765, 2021.

EGU21-7989 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18 | Highlight

Large scale assessment of post-drought climate sensitivity of tree-growth

Christopher Leifsson, Allan Buras, Anja Rammig, and Christian Zang

Hotter droughts will have an increasingly influential role in shaping forest ecosystems in the future. Risks include decreases in species richness, altered species distributions, forest dieback and changed function as carbon sink. A common method to study the impacts of droughts on forests is the quantification of reductions in biomass productivity via secondary growth – approximated by ring-width measurements –, including duration until growth rates return to pre-drought levels, so-called legacy periods. However, while these metrics are practical and relatively easy to measure, the underlying governing mechanisms are not, and thus poorly understood. Consequently, it is uncertain if drought-induced reductions in secondary growth are due to corresponding decreases in total physiological function or high plasticity, and if recovery times are due to lasting damage or adaptation with more carbon allocated to drought-mitigating structures.

The principle of the most limiting factor for tree-growth can be used to track temporal variations in climate-growth relationships. Similarly, the considerable strain hotter drought constitutes for tree-growth, and the need to repair damaged structures or alter carbon allocation, may imply temporary climate sensitivity deviations during legacy periods. Identifying their existence and quantifying subsequent differences in these deviations can help to shed light on strategies used by trees to respond to droughts.

Here, we detect and quantify deviations in climate-growth relationships during hotter drought legacy periods and assess how they differ according to clade (angiosperms – gymnosperms), site aridity and hydraulic safety margin. We do this by applying a linear mixed model on all ring-width indices (RWI) in the global-scale International Tree-Ring Data Bank (ITRDB) which exhibit a positive correlation with Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI). We apply a combined climatological and ecological definition for drought events and use site-dependent SPEI time-scales to allow for specific climate dependencies.

Results show heterogeneous post-drought climate sensitivity deviations, which are broadly categorized in three groups: 1) angiosperms growing in arid sites become increasingly sensitive to climate for 2 – 4 years; 2) angiosperms in mesic sites and or with high hydraulic safety margin show abrupt and complete disruption of the climate-growth relationship for the first year after droughts, which turn into a decrease in climate sensitivity for an additional 1 – 3 years; 3) gymnosperms in arid sites become less sensitive to climate for 2 – 4 years, although without the abrupt disruption seen in group 2. We discuss these results and their implications in an ecophysiological context, including future research avenues.

In conclusion, the results clearly show a functional legacy effect that is not detected through measurements of reductions in biomass accumulation alone, hinting at differential strategies employed by trees to cope with hotter droughts. This is a first step towards a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying hotter drought legacies which may help to improve ecosystem models and better predict how trees will respond to drought in a warming future climate.

How to cite: Leifsson, C., Buras, A., Rammig, A., and Zang, C.: Large scale assessment of post-drought climate sensitivity of tree-growth, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7989, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7989, 2021.

EGU21-12650 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Post-glacial re-colonization and natural selection have shaped growth responses of silver fir across Europe

Elisabet Martínez-Sancho, Christian Rellstab, Frédéric Guillaume, Christof Bigler, Patrick Fonti, Thomas Wohlgemuth, and Yann Vitasse

Warmer climate and more frequent extreme droughts will pose major threats to forest ecosystems. Persistence of intra-specific populations of tree species will depend on their tolerance and adaptive capacities to forthcoming climate conditions. However, past demography processes due to post-glacial recolonization can also contribute to the genetic-based differences in growth responses among provenances. In this study, we investigated the impact of climatic conditions on growth traits among 18 provenances of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) from west, south and eastern Europe growing in two provenance trials established in Switzerland in 1980s. We further assessed whether the differences in growth-related traits across provenances were linked to their genetic differences due to recolonization history and natural selection processes.

In total 250 individuals were measured and cored for dendrochronological analyses, and different growth-related traits were calculated: i) total tree height and diameter at breast height (DBH), ii) growth-climate relationships using correlations between tree-ring width and monthly climate parameters as well as levels of autocorrelation, and iii) short-term responses to extreme drought using resilience components (resilience, resistance, and recovery) to the severe drought that occurred in the study area in 2003. We also genotyped all the individuals in 150 putatively neutral single nucleotide polymorphisms to define the neutral genetic structure of the population, the neutral genetic differentiation among provenances (FST) and the genetic variation among provenances in relation to the total genetic variance in a trait (QST). Signs of natural selection were assessed by two approaches: i) Pearson correlations between the least-square means of provenances of the traits and bioclimatic variables from the seed origin, and ii) QST-FST comparison.

The studied provenances grouped into three longitudinal clusters reassembling the genetic lineages of refugia from the last glacial maximum: the provenance of the Pyrenees as a sole member of the westernmost cluster, the Central European provenances representing the central cluster and all the eastern European provenances forming the eastern cluster. These three lineages showed differences in growth performance traits (height and DBH), with the trees from the eastern cluster being the top performers. The Pyrenees cluster showed significantly lower recovery and resilience to the extreme drought of 2003 as well as lower values of growth autocorrelation. A QST-FST and correlation analyses with climate of provenance origin suggest that the differences among provenances found in some traits result from natural selection. Our study suggests that post-glacial re-colonization and natural selection are the major drivers explaining the intra-specific variability in growth of silver fir across Europe. These findings provide insights to support assisted gene flow to ensure the persistence of the species in European forests.

How to cite: Martínez-Sancho, E., Rellstab, C., Guillaume, F., Bigler, C., Fonti, P., Wohlgemuth, T., and Vitasse, Y.: Post-glacial re-colonization and natural selection have shaped growth responses of silver fir across Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12650, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12650, 2021.

EGU21-13156 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Tree rings and genetic control of drought resilience

Miriam Isaac-Renton, David Montwé, Michael Stoehr, Jonathan Degner, Trisha Hook, Lise van der Merwe, Omnia Gamal El-Dien, Lori Daniels, Alvin Yanchuk, and Elizabeth Campbell

Severe drought events are affecting forests around the world, even in temperate climates. A viable climate change adaptation strategy may involve planting forests with trees more resilient to drought. The majority of the 300 million seedlings planted annually in western Canada are genetically-selected trees derived from tree breeding programs. Since tree breeding populations supply the seed that is deployed on the landscape, it is important to closely examine the degree of genetic control of drought resilience in these populations – yet methods for evaluating drought responses in mature experimental trials are limited. We evaluated the potential to use tree rings to infer genetic adaptation to drought. Specifically, we used annual growth increments to evaluate the genetic component behind variation in drought resilience. We also quantified potential genetic trade-offs between drought resilience and growth in long-term progeny trials. We worked with two economically and ecologically valuable sympatric conifers, coastal Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii) and western redcedar (Thuja plicata). Annual growth increment and tree height data were obtained from 1980 coastal Douglas-fir trees (93 polycross families on two well-replicated sites at age 19) and 1520 western redcedar trees (26 polycross families on three well-replicated sites at age 18). All trees showed substantial reduction in growth under drought, but there was clear variability in the longer-term response of families within each breeding population. The heritability (h2) of such drought resilience, or proportion of this variation explained by genetics, was high for Douglas-fir (h2 = 0.26, SE = 0.07) and moderate for redcedar (h2 = 0.13, SE = 0.04). Preliminary genetic correlations between tree height and drought resilience were also positive for both species (Douglas-fir: rg = 0.77, SE = 0.18; redcedar: rg = 0.62, SE = 0.17). Families that were both high-yielding and drought resilient could also be identified. Since growth response to drought is a variable and heritable trait, these traits are therefore under the control of the tree breeder. Moreover, the positive genetic correlations between tree height and an adaptive growth response to drought suggest that historic selection for tree height did not compromise drought resilience of planted seedlings. Tree rings appear to be an effective tool to screen these populations for drought resilience, which will help ensure that planted trees will remain healthy and productive under climate change.

How to cite: Isaac-Renton, M., Montwé, D., Stoehr, M., Degner, J., Hook, T., van der Merwe, L., Gamal El-Dien, O., Daniels, L., Yanchuk, A., and Campbell, E.: Tree rings and genetic control of drought resilience, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13156, 2021.

EGU21-1126 | vPICO presentations | CL1.18

Forest management and hotter droughts: tree-growth monitoring during 2018/2019 in northeastern Germany

Roberto Cruz-García, Leona Frieboese, Tobias Scharnweber, Ilse Alejandra Siller-Aguillón, Johannes Kalbe, and Martin Wilmking

Forests are vital ecosystem service providers and are thought to play an important role as carbon sinks in climate-warming mitigation. Climate change can modify environmental forcing of tree growth, bringing changes in growth performance and ultimately in ecosystem community composition. Thus, studying how trees and forests react to a changing environment is required to preserve and manage them sustainably. It is largely unexplored how extreme weather events, such as the so called “hotter-droughts”, interact with silvicultural interventions (thinning). To address this problem, we explore a monitoring data set from 2017-2020 of three broadleaved species native to the Central European temperate forest (Fagus sylvatica L., Quercus robur L., Betula pendula Roth). To investigate the effect of thinning interventions and weather conditions on intra-annual growth, an experimental gap was created at the end of 2016 in the studied stands. Trees standing next to the gap and others on closed-stand conditions were equipped with band-dendrometers, which were read out bi-weekly throughout the four vegetation periods. The obtained growth-curves were used to compare absolute and relative growth between experimental conditions (gap vs. closed), and non-linear models were fitted to derive the phenology of stem-growth. In general, trees under gap conditions revealed smaller increments than trees in closed stands during the drought years 2018/2019, but especially for 2019. Species differences indicate beech was most sensitive to the extreme summer drought, as expected given the conclusions of several dendroecological studies. The results indicate different sensitivities to extreme events on the years following silvicultural interventions between tree species. As gap-formation occurs also naturally in temperate forests, these results suggest a possible mechanism through which legacy-effects and variability in individual climate responses arise, which can help unravel climatic signals in tree-rings and explain how they are modulated by ecological conditions and management interventions. Monitoring of tree-growth in a high-temporal resolution seems a valuable approach to understand the impact of extreme events and climate change on tree-growth. The obtained insights are relevant for improving sustainable silvicultural management, as the suitability of a species for a site might change upon further warming and more frequent drought spells. We recommend continuing to explore tree-growth at finer time-scales to shed light on species performance under climate change.

How to cite: Cruz-García, R., Frieboese, L., Scharnweber, T., Siller-Aguillón, I. A., Kalbe, J., and Wilmking, M.: Forest management and hotter droughts: tree-growth monitoring during 2018/2019 in northeastern Germany, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1126, 2021.

Variable retention harvesting (VRH) is a silvicultural management practice that has been utilized to promote biodiversity, growth, and carbon sequestration in managed forests. VRH has been implemented as a climate mitigation strategy in response to increased climate warming and more erratic precipitation patterns which are occurring due to anthropogenic production of greenhouse gases. The aim of this study is to determine the impact of VRH and climate change on the inter-annual growth and carbon sequestration in a 20 ha red pine (Pinus resinosa) plantation forest located in southern Ontario, Canada over a 5-year period (2014-2018). The VRH treatment was implemented in 2014 within twenty, 1-hectare plots, which were subjected to one of four experimental thinning treatment types; 33% and 55% crown retention in an aggregated pattern (33A and 55A, respectively); and 33% and 55% crown retention in a dispersed pattern (33D and 55D, respectively), while four plots were maintained as unharvested control (CN) plots. In each plot, approximately sixty 5 mm increment cores were collected from residual trees during the spring and summer of 2019. These cores were processed for annual incremental growth according to standard dendrochronological methods to identify the climatic drivers on growth. Biomass and carbon sequestration were estimated using a species-specific allometric growth equation to quantify the impact of the different VRH treatments on red pine growth. Results of climate-growth assessments indicate that red pine growth in this region is dependent on maximum temperatures and total precipitation during the summer growing season. These relations were best captured in the May-July standard precipitation evapotranspiration index with a 3-month memory (SPEI3). May to August average maximum temperature and May to June total precipitation are also important drivers of red pine growth in all plots. We found that the dispersed crown retention patterns are the only VRH treatments that result in an increase in post-harvest growth; 8.12 ± 9.83% increase for 33D and 7.52 ± 5.71% increase for 55D. This suggests that dispersed retention may spatially optimize growth for the climatic conditions and be best suited for managing these forests under changing climatic conditions in the future. Aggregated treatments are found to have significantly less growth post-harvest; 33A had an average of 0.34 kg less biomass post-harvest (2.50 ± 1.94% decrease) and 55A had an average of 0.44 kg less biomass post-harvest (6.36 ± 3.82 % decrease). Our control sites showed that post-harvest growth showed an average of 0.56 kg less biomass post-harvest (6.01 ± 3.39% decrease). Within the aggregated treatments, exterior trees demonstrated increased growth, annual biomass accumulation, and carbon sequestration compared to trees growing in the interior of the aggregated plots. Our results suggest that dispersed crown retentions are most optimal when the goal of VRH is to increase growth or carbon sequestration. This research is ultimately important in informing future forest management practices in similar plantation forests across southern Ontario and elsewhere in the Great Lakes region and northeastern North America. 

How to cite: Zugic, J., Pisaric, M. F. J., McKenzie, S. M., Arain, M. A., and Parker, W. C.: Assessing the short-term impacts of variable retention harvesting (VRH) and climatic drivers on carbon sequestration and growth of a red pine (Pinus resinosa) plantation in southern Ontario, Canada, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13539, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13539, 2021.

CL1.19 – Speleothem and Continental Carbonate Archives of Modern and Palaeoenvironmental Change

EGU21-10629 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Cave monitoring at Drenska Peštera (N. Macedonia) – preliminary results

Marjan Temovski, Marianna Túri, Anikó Horváth, and László Palcsu

Southeast Europe (i.e. Balkan Peninsula) is a climatologically interesting and complex area, located in a transient zone affected by both Mediterranean and continental atmospheric influences. Speleothem paleoclimate records are limited in this region, with only a few such records from the central parts. Furthermore, in the central parts, there are almost no existing data on cave monitoring, as well as on isotopic composition of precipitation.

For that purpose, a cave monitoring campaign was initiated in October 2018 at Drenska Peštera (southern parts of N. Macedonia) that followed a precipitation monitoring program initiated in the area in April 2018. The study site, located at 1150 m a.s.l., is an old fossil cave with a relatively simple morphology, and a total depth of ~40 m. The area has a mountain climate characterized as Dfb (cold with warm summer and no dry season) according to the Köppen-Geiger climate classification. Vadose speleothems are found throughout the cave, and few broken stalagmites were collected for paleoclimate study purposes. The cave monitoring initially included only monitoring of cave air temperatures, and was expanded in 2019 to include also monitoring of dripwater hydrology and geochemistry. Air temperatures were recorded at an hourly rate at three vertically distributed locations in the cave and at one location outside. Monthly collection of dripwater was initiated at two and later expanded to three dripping sites in the cave.

Preliminary results show that the local annual precipitation is generally in low amount (~400 mm), with maximum in Summer and Spring, and lowest in Winter. δ18O values of the precipitation show strong seasonality, with two distinct periods of higher (May-October) and lower (November-April) δ18O values, when average monthly temperatures are, respectively, above or below the local mean annual temperature. The local meteoric water line has slope that is close to the global meteoric water line with somewhat higher intercept indicating mixture of North Atlantic and Mediterranean atmospheric influences. Monthly variation of deuterium-excess indicates higher contribution of Mediterranean-sourced moisture in the cold period, likely related to Mediterranean cyclogenesis.

Cave air temperatures are stable (10.8±0.1 °C), reflecting the mean annual air temperature of the outside station (10.7 °C). Cave dripping is active mostly between December and July, and decreases (or completely stops) between August and November. Mean dripwater δ18O values (-11.1 ‰) are lower than the weighted-mean value of precipitation (-8.6 ‰), indicating bias towards cooler period infiltration. Dripwater δ18O values have smaller variation but still reflect the seasonal pattern of the precipitation, albeit with a seasonal shift, as the highest δ18O values are found in the winter period. The smallest variation in δ18O, dripping rate and temperature is found at the deepest station, reflecting better mixed aquifer, and most stable environment.

This research was funded by the GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00009 ‘ICER’ project. We would like to thank Dragan Temovski, Biljana Temovska, Stojan Mitreski, as well as Zlatko Angeleski and Darko Nedanoski from SK Zlatovrv, for their assistance with the cave and precipitation monitoring.

How to cite: Temovski, M., Túri, M., Horváth, A., and Palcsu, L.: Cave monitoring at Drenska Peštera (N. Macedonia) – preliminary results, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10629, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10629, 2021.

EGU21-7151 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Farmed calcite δ18O, δ13C, and Δ47 at Ascunsă cave, Romania

Virgil Dragusin, Vasile Ersek, Alvaro Fernandez, Roxana Ionete, Andreea Iordache, Nele Meckler, Ionut Mirea, and Ramona Zgavarogea

Ascunsă cave (Romania) is the subject of a monitoring program since 2012. While the cave air temperature was very stable around 7°C for most of the time, it experienced in 2019 a 3°C rise, and remained high until the present.

We present here δ18O, δ13C, and clumped isotope results from calcite farmed at two drip points inside the cave (POM X and POM 2). POM X has a slower drip rate than POM 2 and deposits calcite more continuously. Calcite deposition has been shown to depend on cave air CO2 concentration, which controls the drip water pH and, further, the calcite saturation index.

In 2019, δ18O values at both sites quickly shifted to lower values as a response to the increase in temperature. At POM X, values were situated between approximately -7.2‰ and -7.6‰ before this transition, whereas in 2019 they shifted to -7.8‰ - -8.0‰. At POM 2, where values were generally lower, they shifted from -7.5‰ to -7.8‰ to -8.0‰.

Clumped isotope temperature estimates mostly agree, within measurement error, with measured cave temperature. This agreement is notable given that strong offsets are commonly observed in mid-latitude caves, reflecting kinetic fractionation effects. However, intervals with deviations from cave temperature are also observed, suggesting variations in isotopic disequilibrium conditions with time.

Here we will discuss these isotope changes in relation to cave air temperature and CO2 concentration, drip water isotope values and elemental chemistry, as well as in relation to drip rates, in order to improve our understanding of calcite precipitation and isotope effects in caves.

How to cite: Dragusin, V., Ersek, V., Fernandez, A., Ionete, R., Iordache, A., Meckler, N., Mirea, I., and Zgavarogea, R.: Farmed calcite δ18O, δ13C, and Δ47 at Ascunsă cave, Romania, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7151, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7151, 2021.

EGU21-790 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Investigating cave responses to regional climate change: an approach to calibrate speleothem proxies in Madagascar

Ny Riavo G. Voarintsoa, Antsa Lal’Aina J. Ratovonanahary, Avotriniaina Z. M. Rakotovao, and Steven Bouillon

Caves are an excellent natural laboratory for understanding the transfer processes of the region’s environmental signals to speleothems. At least eight speleothems have produced high resolution paleoclimate and paleoenvironment records from Anjohibe Cave, NW Madagascar. However, due to the remote and difficult access to many caves in Madagascar, no studies have yet been done to understand the transfer of climate and environmental changes of the region to the cave. This is the first monitoring study to understand the linkage between regional climatology and various responses in Anjohibe Cave. We monitored (1) the drip water pH, TDS, EC, temperature, δ13CDIC, δ18Ow, δ2Hw, and elemental (Ca, Mg, Sr) composition, and (2) the cave atmosphere pCO2, relative humidity and temperature. Results show that air-to-air transfer is fast, and the internal parameters closely vary with the regional climatology. In contrast, rainfall to drip signal transfer is not immediate, and it can take few months to one season for the signals to be detected in the drip water due to the “epikarst storage effect”. The deposition of CaCO3 is inferred to occur late in the dry austral winter season, during which prior carbonate precipitation was also detected. Since the growth of speleothems is influenced by numerous cave-specific factors, this study, although preliminary, indicates that Anjohibe Cave drip waters are capable of registering changes in its surrounding environment. A longer monitoring study is expected in the future to constrain the timing and the mode of transfer.

How to cite: Voarintsoa, N. R. G., Ratovonanahary, A. L. J., Rakotovao, A. Z. M., and Bouillon, S.: Investigating cave responses to regional climate change: an approach to calibrate speleothem proxies in Madagascar, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-790, 2021.

The sedimentary record of the endorheic Dead Sea and its precursors comprises aragonite laminae that make up an environmental archive extending into the Pleistocene, partially in annual resolution. Nevertheless, despite the importance of resolving the conditions that facilitate aragonite precipitation in the Dead Sea, contradictions exist between recent studies that utilized modern observations and the late Pleistocene geological record. The implications of aragonite precipitation in the Dead Sea and in its late Pleistocene predecessor Lake Lisan were investigated in this study by mixing natural and synthetic brines with a synthetic bicarbonate solution representing flood water entering the lake (4mM), with and without additions of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). This was followed by measurements of aragonite precipitation incubation, rates, yields. Aragonite precipitation took place within days to few weeks after mixing of the brine with the synthetic bicarbonate solution and its incubation time was proportional to bicarbonate concentrations, while precipitation rates were also influenced by ionic strength. The addition of EPS inhibited aragonite precipitation for several months, which provides a reasonable explanation for the proposed summer-time precipitation of aragonite during the late Pleistocene glacials. We suggest that under increased inflow, increased biological activity would result in increased EPS production that could inhibit aragonite precipitation for several months. Finally, previous estimates of the freshwater inflow required to provide the carbonate for a uniform aragonite lamina of a typical thickness deposited during glacials are unreasonably high. This can be resolved by various processes: (1) Patchy aragonite deposition over limited segments of the lake’s floor; (2) Supply of additional carbonate to the lake from aeolian dust and recycled dust deposits; (3) Carbonate production through the oxidation of organic carbon by sulfate-reducing bacteria at the hypolimnion. Altogether, these results indicate that aragonite laminae thicknesses are insufficient to quantitatively reconstruct the hydrological balance for the entire lake, but may still be valuable for identifying climatic periodicities over a continuous record in a specific study site.

How to cite: Ben Dor, Y., Flax, T., Levitan, I., Brauer, A., Enzel, Y., and Erel, Y.: Using laboratory investigations to reveal the palaeohydrological implications of aragonite laminae deposition in the endorheic Dead Sea and its precursors under different climatic conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-359, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-359, 2021.

EGU21-9619 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Contemporaneously growing speleothems and their value to decipher in-cave processes

Vanessa Skiba and Jens Fohlmeister

Speleothems have been developed to be valuable climate archives. Albeit much progress has been made to understand speleothem proxies, it remains difficult to differentiate between a direct climate signal and variations, which occurred due to in-cave processes like prior calcite precipitation, CO2 degassing or C exchange between dissolved inorganic C-species and cave air CO2. Here, we analyse palaeoclimate proxies of contemporaneously growing speleothems, which were extracted from the SISALv2 database (Comas-Bru et al., 2020). We argue that differences in their stable O and C isotopic composition as well as in their growth rate can only arise by differences of drip site specific conditions as climate conditions for pairs of contemporaneously growing speleothems are similar. To better understand differences in the isotopic composition and growth rate of contemporaneously growing speleothems, we investigate the in-cave processes by applying a speleothem isotope and growth model. The model is based on a Rayleigh process, which includes CO2 degassing and CaCO3 precipitation, HCO3- <—> H2O buffering as well as CO2 exchange and is able to calculate growth rates. The model accounts for CaCO3 deposition as prior calcite precipitation as well as CaCO3 deposition at the speleothem. We find that C-exchange processes are necessary to explain the linked isotopic and growth rate differences in speleothems.

 

References

Comas-Bru, L., Atsawawaranunt, K., Harrison, S., SISAL working group members (2020): SISAL (Speleothem Isotopes Synthesis and AnaLysis Working Group) database version 2.0. University Of Reading.

How to cite: Skiba, V. and Fohlmeister, J.: Contemporaneously growing speleothems and their value to decipher in-cave processes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9619, 2021.

EGU21-5941 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

A probabilistic approach to oxygen isotope modelling of speleothem data with age uncertainties

Josefine Axelsson, Andreas Nilsson, and Jesper Sjolte

Due to age uncertainties and poor resolution in speleothems, age-depth modelling techniques are often implemented for cross-examinations. In this study, we use a variation of the analogue method to perform a pseudo-proxy reconstruction of the large-scale variability in Indian and East Asian monsoon precipitation using synthetic oxygen isotope records from speleothem sites and an isotope-enabled climate model.

We present a probabilistic approach to synchronize speleothems through oxygen isotope data and individual independent age constraints, achieved by co-estimating the regional δ18O variations through time. The δ18O variability is modelled using Gaussian processes, and an adaptation of BACON age-depth model is further used for the individual speleothem chronologies.

The method is tested using synthetic speleothem data generated from the ECHAM/MPI-OM climate model and corrupted through realistic noise from speleothems from the SISAL database.

By incorporating accurate and realistic depth-dependent age-uncertainties rather than shifting, stretching or compressing the time-series of oxygen isotope data, this modelling approach may lead to advancements of handling speleothem data for regional to global evaluations on variability between speleothems and timescales.

How to cite: Axelsson, J., Nilsson, A., and Sjolte, J.: A probabilistic approach to oxygen isotope modelling of speleothem data with age uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5941, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5941, 2021.

EGU21-3656 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Accurate dating of tropical South Pacific stalagmites using physical and chemical cycles

Mohammadali Faraji, Andrea Borsato, Silvia Frisia, John C. Hellstrom, Andrew Lorrey, Adam Hartland, Alan Greig, and David P. Mattey

Climate and environmental events recorded by speleothems are accurately dated by radiometric techniques. However, speleothems from the Tropical Pacific are difficult to date by the U-series radiometric method due to low uranium content and/or multiple sources of 230Th. This is the case of stalagmites from Atiu, in the Southern Cook Islands Archipelago, which potentially record shifts of the South Pacific Convergence Zone through time and their impact on droughts and floods. Here we constrain the U-series-based chronology using synchrotron µXRF two-dimensional mapping of Sr concentrations coupled with growth laminae optical imaging constrained by in situ monitoring.

Chronology involving annual laminae counting has, to date, been focused on settings where strong temperature seasonality favours the formation of annual geochemical/physical cycles. In Atiu caves temperature is constant throughout the year (mean ∼23 °C), whereas precipitation exhibits a strong seasonality, with 70% of the mean Total Annual Rainfall (TAR = 1930±365 mm/yr) occurring from December to May. However, during the drier season (June through November) rainfall amounts are still substantial, which can lead to missing dry seasons in the speleothem record. Moreover, a shallow depth of the caves (5 -10 m) and limited soil cover enhance fast transmission of rain signal into the caves, possibly resulting in the formation of sub-annual growth bands. Thus, the concentration variability of Sr and Mg alone are not sufficient to identify an annual signal.

We integrated, in a multivariate analysis, high resolution (6µm) variations in trace elements analysed by LA-ICP-MS, with optically visible growth bands and two-dimensional Sr-concentration laminae as identified through synchrotron-radiation-based micro XRF mapping. Cycles of [Mg], [Sr], [Na], [Ba] and [P] concentration were counted for three independent transects in a modern stalagmite (Pu17) from Pouatea Cave. This included semi-automated counting of peak positions on individual elements, as well as on their principal components (PCA). The three independent analytical techniques produced 37 peak counting series, 20 of which were averaged and integrated into a single age model fitting into the uncertainty limits of U/Th dates. This master chronology was used to construct an age model that integrated laminae counting errors with the U/Th uncertainty. The average uncertainty of U–Th ages included in the age model is ca. 50%, whereas the initial lamina chronology has a maximum error of 15 years (4%), thus decreasing the uncertainty by at least 45%.

Our yearly resolved chronology was then tested against the local rainfall record by using hydrologically sensitive elements Mg, Na and P. High correlation coefficients for each element corroborated the reliability of the age model, paving the way to reconstruct seasonally resolved records from trace element variations in these tropical speleothems.

How to cite: Faraji, M., Borsato, A., Frisia, S., C. Hellstrom, J., Lorrey, A., Hartland, A., Greig, A., and P. Mattey, D.: Accurate dating of tropical South Pacific stalagmites using physical and chemical cycles, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3656, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3656, 2021.

EGU21-14642 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

First investigations of fine-grained cryogenic cave carbonates from a High-Arctic permafrost karst system in Greenland

Anika Donner, Christoph Spötl, Paul Töchterle, Irka Hajdas, and Gina E. Moseley

In recent years, cryogenic cave carbonates (CCC) have become the focus of studies tracking past climate change in periglacial environments. Two types of these speleothems occur, fine-grained CCC (CCCfine), which form due to the rapid freezing of a thin water film on ice, and coarse-grained CCC whose origin is related to the slow freezing of water pockets inside cave ice. Here, we report for the first time the occurrence of CCCfine from a cave in northeast Greenland, presently situated in continuous permafrost.

Eqik Qaarusussuaq (Cove Cave), located at 80.2° N, is a 103 m long, gently-dipping phreatic passage that was discovered during the 2019 Greenland Caves Project Expedition (www.greenlandcavesproject.org). CCCfine were found in a dry chamber 65 m behind the entrance. The cave air temperature at the CCC site of -14.7 °C contrasts with outside air temperatures of up to +18.0 °C in July 2019. This, together with current dry conditions at the sampling site, indicates that water infiltration, necessary for CCC formation, is not possible under present-day climate conditions. This is further supported by a lack of ice found within the cave.

Stable isotope analyses of CCC show δ18O values ranging from -21.9 to -16.0 ‰ and δ13C values between 8.4 and 11.7 ‰ VPDB. While the δ13C values are consistent with published data of CCCfine from caves at lower latitudes, the δ18O values are significantly lower and plot in the field of CCCcoarse (cf. Žák et al., 2018). This shift reflects the much lower δ18O values of meteoric precipitation in northeast Greenland compared to lower latitude sites.

Exploratory radiocarbon dating suggests that CCCfine formed in this High Arctic cave as recent as during the end of the Little Ice Age.

 

Reference

Žák, K., Onac, B.P., Kadebskaya, O.I., Filippi, M., Dublyansky, Y., Luetscher, M., 2018. Cryogenic mineral formation in caves. In: Perşoiu, A., Lauritzen, S.-E. (Eds.), Ice caves. Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands, pp. 123–162.

How to cite: Donner, A., Spötl, C., Töchterle, P., Hajdas, I., and Moseley, G. E.: First investigations of fine-grained cryogenic cave carbonates from a High-Arctic permafrost karst system in Greenland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14642, 2021.

EGU21-14487 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Cryogenic cave carbonate formation during the Industrial Era in the Central Pyrenees (Iberian Peninsula)

Miguel Bartolomé, Ana Moreno, Marc Luetscher, Christoph Spötl, Maria Leunda, Gerard Cazenave, Ánchel Belmonte, Cinta Osácar, Hai Cheng, Richard Lawrence Edwards, and Carlos Sancho

Cryogenic cave carbonates (CCC) are rare speleothems that form when water freezes inside cave ice bodies. CCC have been used as an proxy for permafrost degradation, permafrost thickness, or subsurface ice formation. The presence of these minerals is usually attributed to warm periods of permafrost degradation. We found coarse crystalline CCC types within transparent, massive congelation ice in two Pyrenean ice caves in the Monte Perido Massif: Devaux, located on the north face at 2828 m a.s.l., and Sarrios 6, located in the south face at 2780 m a.s.l. The external mean annual air temperature (MAAT) at Devaux is ~ 0°C, while at Sarrios 6 is ~ 2.5°C. In the Monte Perdido massif discontinuous permafrost is currently present between 2750 and 2900 m a.s.l. and is more frequent above 2900 m a.s.l. in northern faces. In Devaux, air and rock temperatures, as well as the presence of hoarfrost and the absence of drip sites indicate a frozen host rock. Moreover, a river flows along the main gallery, and during winters the water freezes at the spring causing backflooding in the cave. In contrast, Sarrios 6 has several drip sites, although the gallery where CCC were collected is hydrologically inactive. This gallery opened in recent years due to ice retreat. During spring, water is present in the gallery due to the overflow of ponds forming beneath drips. CCC commonly formed as sub-millimeter-size spherulites, rhombohedrons and rafts. 230Th ages of the same CCC morphotype indicate that their formation took place at 1953±7, 1959±14, 1957±14, 1958±15, 1974±16 CE in Devaux, while in Sarrios 6 they formed at 1964±5, 1992±2, 1996±1 CE. The cumulative probability density function indicates that the most probable formation occurred 1957-1965 and 1992-1997. The instrumental temperature record at 2860 m a.s.l. indicates positive MAAT in 1964 (0.2°C) and 1997 (0.8°C). CCC formation could thus correspond with those two anomalously warm years. The massive and transparent ice would indicate a sudden ingress of water and subsequent slow freezing inside both caves during those years. Probably, CCC formation took place at a seasonal scale during the annual cycle.

How to cite: Bartolomé, M., Moreno, A., Luetscher, M., Spötl, C., Leunda, M., Cazenave, G., Belmonte, Á., Osácar, C., Cheng, H., Edwards, R. L., and Sancho, C.: Cryogenic cave carbonate formation during the Industrial Era in the Central Pyrenees (Iberian Peninsula), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14487, 2021.

EGU21-12836 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Climatic variations during the Holocene inferred from radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopes in a high-alpine cave

Caroline Welte, Jens Fohlmeister, Melina Wertnik, Lukas Wacker, Bodo Hattendorf, Tim Eglinton, and Christoph Spötl

Laser ablation coupled online to accelerator mass spectrometry [1] allows analyzing the radiocarbon (14C) concentration in carbonate samples in a fast and spatially resolved manner. This novel technique can provide 14C data at a spatial resolution comparable to that of stable carbon isotope measurements and, thus, can help to interpret δ13C signatures. In this work, we analyzed δ13C and 14C of a Holocene stalagmite from the high-alpine Spannagel Cave (Austria). Combined δ13C and 14C profiles allow identifying three growth periods : (i) the period > 8 ka BP exhibits relatively low δ13C values with small variability combined with a comparably high dead carbon fraction (dcf) of around 60%. This points towards C contributions of an old organic carbon reservoir in the karst potentially mobilized due to the warm climatic conditions of the early Holocene. (ii) Between 3.8 and 8 ka BP, a strong variability in δ13C with values from -8 to +1‰ and a generally lower dcf was observed. The δ13C variability was most likely caused by changes in gas exchange processes in the cave, which are induced by reduced drip rates as derived from lower stalagmite growth rates. Additionally, the lower dcf indicates that the OM reservoir contributed less to stalagmite growth in this period possibly as a result of reduced precipitation or because the OM reservoir became exhausted. (iii) In the youngest section between 2.4 and 3.8 ka BP, comparably stable and low δ13C values combined with an increasing dcf reaching up to 50% are again hinting towards a contribution of an aged organic carbon reservoir in the karst.

[1] C. Welte, et al., (2016). Anal. Chem., 88, 8570– 8576.

How to cite: Welte, C., Fohlmeister, J., Wertnik, M., Wacker, L., Hattendorf, B., Eglinton, T., and Spötl, C.: Climatic variations during the Holocene inferred from radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopes in a high-alpine cave, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12836, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12836, 2021.

EGU21-15319 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Elemental concentrations in two stalagmites from B7-Cave indicating environmental changes during the Holocene

Dana Felicitas Christine Riechelmann, Klaus Peter Jochum, and Denis Scholz

Two stalagmites (B7-1 and B7-7) were sampled from B7-Cave in western Germany. B7-Cave is located very closely (100 m) to the extensively investigated Bunker Cave. Both B7-Cave stalagmites were previously dated and analysed for stable carbon and oxygen isotope composition at low resolution by Niggemann et al. (2003). Both stalagmites were now redated more precisely using the MC-ICP-MS methodology at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, and Mainz University. Furthermore, the elemental concentrations of Mg, Sr, Ba, Al, P, Y, Zn, Th, and U were determined by laser ablation ICP-MS (MPIC Mainz) at high resolution. Additionally, thin sections of both stalagmites were anaylsed for their calcite fabrics and detection of detrital layers.

The dating showed a growth phase from 10.9 to 6.6 ka BP for stalagmite B7-1 and three growth phases for stalagmite B7-7 from 11.2 to 6.3 ka BP, 3.2 to 2.9 ka BP, and 1.3 to 1.2 ka BP. This is improved to the dating from Niggemmann et al. (2003), who only detected one hiatus in stalagmite B7-7. Stalagmites B7-1 and B7-7 have a substantial overlapping period. During this period, both stalagmites contain frequent detrital layers, which probably represent short growth stops. However, these growth stops are too short and contain too much detrital material to resolve their timing and duration by 230Th/U dating.

Phosphorus, Y, and Zn are correlated in both stalagmites and during all growth phases. These three elements are interpreted as proxies for vegetation activity. Magnesium, Sr, and Ba are difficult to interpret due to several factors potentially influencing them, such as prior calcite precipitation, growth rate, and soil processes. Furthermore, the detrital layers in stalagmite B7-1 and the oldest growth phase of B7-7 are indicated by high Al concentrations.

 

 

Niggemann, S., Mangini, A., Richter, D. K., Wurth, G., 2003. A paleoclimate record of the last 17,600 years in stalagmites from the B7 cave, Sauerland, Germany. Quaternary Science Reviews 22, 555-567.

How to cite: Riechelmann, D. F. C., Jochum, K. P., and Scholz, D.: Elemental concentrations in two stalagmites from B7-Cave indicating environmental changes during the Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15319, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15319, 2021.

EGU21-1356 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Late Holocene climate record from Sırtlanini Cave (central west Anatolia) stalagmite: implications from U-series dating, mineralogy and isotope data 

Ezgi Ünal İmer, İsmail Ömer Yılmaz, Mehmet Oruç Baykara, and Jian-Xin Zhao

Turkey lies along the transition zone between northerly and southerly climate regimes such that it provides opportunity for a good understanding of Holocene climate that impacted ancient Eastern Mediterranean civilizations. Within the scope of the EU-funded SPELEOTOLIA project, 7 caves from western and southwestern Anatolia were visited and several stalagmite samples were collected. Detailed mineralogical and geochemical analyses performed on samples from one of the target caves, the Sırtlanini Cave (Karacasu, Aydın), helps to reconstruct the regional Holocene climate and gives insights on living conditions of Anatolian civilizations, mainly including Roman and Ottoman Empires.   

The 450 m-long Sırtlanini Cave (max. depth of ~40 m; ~1060 m a.s.l.) developed within the Mesozoic marbles of the Menderes Massif. We focus on the first set of U-series age, stable and radiogenic isotope (C, O, and Sr) and mineralogical data performed on the stalagmite (SRT-5) from this cave. The drip water isotope data (δ18OVSMOW = -7.8‰, δDVSMOW = -41.6‰) indicated depletions in O and H isotopes compared to other cave waters in the region. The U-series age results of SRT-5 show that the 423 mm-long stalagmite was deposited fast (0.25 mm/y) between 0.111±0.034 kyr and 1.825±0.421 kyr (BP) spanning the Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman periods. SRT-5 seems to have grown intermittently with at least two possible hiatuses (at around 291 and 401 years BP) based on mineralogical studies. It is mainly composed of fine- to medium-grained columnar calcite, with occasional dendritic fabric and visible annual layering, particularly at the older bottom section of the stalagmite. Stable isotope profiles (δ13C: -10.5 to -8‰ VPDB, δ18O: -7 to -5.5‰ VPDB) constructed using 423 sub-sample analyses along the stalagmite demonstrate significant hydroclimatic variability through the Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period between 195 and 1909 CE. This variation correlates well with previously documented drought and related famine and migration events in western Anatolia primarily in the 19th century. Further investigations (e.g., high-resolution LA-ICPMS trace element analyses) will be performed specifically to constrain the anthropogenic sources and distinguish these from recent Aegean or possible global (e.g., southeast Asian) volcanogenic signals. 

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No: 842403.

How to cite: Ünal İmer, E., Yılmaz, İ. Ö., Baykara, M. O., and Zhao, J.-X.: Late Holocene climate record from Sırtlanini Cave (central west Anatolia) stalagmite: implications from U-series dating, mineralogy and isotope data , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1356, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1356, 2021.

EGU21-15846 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Speleothems as recorders of local climate variability and its implications for Maya cultural evolution from a unique cave site on the northern Yucatán Peninsula

Nils Schorndorf, Norbert Frank, Sophie Warken, Julius Förstel, Andrea Schröder-Ritzrau, Jerónimo Avilés Olguín, and Wolfgang Stinnesbeck

The unsteady cultural evolution and final collapse of Maya civilization in Mesoamerica are heavily debated issues and discussion includes the impact of both natural (e.g., droughts, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions) and social disasters (e.g., warfare and unsustainable economy). An increasing number of records point to recurrent multi-year droughts coinciding with hiatuses in construction, periods of temporary urban abandonment and population collapse. Previous reconstructions indicate that environmental conditions and precipitation on the Yucatán Peninsula were distributed very heterogeneously in space and time and the duration and chronology of events remains uncertain. High resolution environmental reconstructions are, however, mainly based on archives from sites on the southern Yucatán Peninsula.

We have now recovered several stalagmites from Estrella Cave, northern Yucatán Peninsula, spanning the entire Maya era and reaching even to historical times (−1100 to 1780 AD). The high precision 230Th/U ages obtained so far from these stalagmites indicate growth rates of up to 160 µm per year, thus offering the potential for annual to decadal climate proxy reconstruction. Here we present 230Th/U based preliminary age models for some of these stalagmites. Based on growth rates, petrographic observations, and trace element to calcium ratios we draw first conclusions on the timing of (recurrent) dry periods around key episodes of Maya cultural evolution, such as the Terminal Classic Period (~800–1000 AD). Furthermore, these first results show that the incorporation of certain trace elements (Mg, Sr, Ba, P, …) in these speleothems is strongly related to recharge and hence precipitation above the cave. Moreover, the site also contains unique remains of the Mayan culture, such as paintings, pottery, constructions and even buried skeletons, thus highlighting its significance not only for regional climate reconstruction but also for local archaeology.

How to cite: Schorndorf, N., Frank, N., Warken, S., Förstel, J., Schröder-Ritzrau, A., Avilés Olguín, J., and Stinnesbeck, W.: Speleothems as recorders of local climate variability and its implications for Maya cultural evolution from a unique cave site on the northern Yucatán Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15846, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15846, 2021.

EGU21-8066 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Reconstruction of the last three millennia South American Monsoon variability over the Amazon basin using speleothem isotope records 

Marcela Eduarda Della Libera de Godoy, Valdir F. Novello, and Francisco William Cruz

South American Monsoon System (SAMS) and its main feature, the South American Convergence Zone (SACZ) are responsible for the major distribution of moisture in South America. The current work presents a novel high-resolution oxygen isotope record (δ18O) based on speleothems from southwest Amazon basin (Brazil), right at SAMS' core region and SACZ onset, where there is still a gap of high resolution paleoclimate records. The novel δ18O record presents an average of 3 year-resolution, composed by 1344 stable isotope analysis performed in two speleothems with a well-resolved chronology (37 U/Th ages) with average errors <1%. This work aims to describe the rainfall variability of the core region of the South American monsoon for the last 3k years and to take a broader look at precipitation patterns over Amazon basin. The Rondônia δ18O record shows three main stages throughout this time period. The first is from -1000 to ~400 CE, where it’s in accordance with most of other paleorecords from the Amazon basin. the second segment  is from ~400 to 1200 CE, when there is a continuous increase in the δ18O record until it reaches its highest values around 850 CE during the MCA (800-1200 CE), which is in accordance with western Amazon records, whilst the record in eastern Amazon presents an opposite trend. Thus, a precipitation dipole over Amazon emerges from ~400 CE onwards, majorly triggered by anomalous climate changes such as MCA, where western (eastern) Amazon is drier (wetter). During LIA (1450-1800 CE), on the other hand, Rondônia record presents its lowest values, also agreeing with western records and with records under the influence of SACZ whilst on eastern Amazon a drier period is established. Therefore, with this novel paleoclimate record located at the core region of SAMS, it's possible to evidence the dynamics of the precipitation dipole over the Amazon region, as well as understand the SACZ intensity variations.

How to cite: Della Libera de Godoy, M. E., Novello, V. F., and Cruz, F. W.: Reconstruction of the last three millennia South American Monsoon variability over the Amazon basin using speleothem isotope records , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8066, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8066, 2021.

EGU21-3040 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Speleothem records of interannual variability in the tropics during the Holocene

Sarah Parker, Sandy Harrison, and Laia Comas-Bru

Reconstruction of changes in interannual variability through the Holocene period can provide valuable insight into the sensitivity of internal modes of variability (e.g. ENSO, PDO) to external forcing. Coral and bivalve records are widely used examine past changes in short-term variability, however, far fewer reconstructions exist in the terrestrial realm. Here, we use the SISAL (Speleothem Isotopes Synthesis and AnaLysis) database to examine changes in the amplitude of interannual/short-term variability across the monsoon regions, recorded by speleothem δ18O standard deviation (δ18O s.d.). First, we identified and corrected for any confounding factors that may obscure interannual climate signals in the speleothem records, such as variable growth rate. We used a multiple linear regression model to constrain relationships between δ18O s.d. and growth rate and mean climate (represented by mean δ18O), then used these relationships to apply a correction. Second, corrected δ18O s.d. trends were combined into regional monsoon composites, representing changes in short-term variability across the Holocene. Trends are very similar between raw and corrected δ18O s.d., suggesting that confounding factors have a minimal effect. Trends differ amongst regions: the Indian monsoon shows gradually increasing δ18O s.d. through the Holocene, whilst the East Asian monsoon shows no significant changes through this period. The Indonesian-Australian monsoon shows higher than present δ18O s.d. during the mid- to early Holocene and the South American monsoon shows multi-centennial scale fluctuations between higher and lower δ18O s.d.

How to cite: Parker, S., Harrison, S., and Comas-Bru, L.: Speleothem records of interannual variability in the tropics during the Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3040, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3040, 2021.

EGU21-12867 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19 | Highlight

Synchronous climate change between the Arctic and the Asian and Indo-Australian summer monsoon domains at the Younger Dryas termination

Russell Drysdale, Michael Griffiths, John Hellstrom, Ellen Corrick, Jon Woodhead, Kale Sniderman, Sune Rasmussen, Raimund Mueschler, and Emilie Capron

The end of the Younger Dryas (YD) was Earth’s last major abrupt climate event and is most vividly preserved in the water-isotope (ice δ18O), calcium (Ca2+) and methane-concentration (CH4) series of Greenland ice cores. Although numerous palaeoclimate records span this transition, surprisingly few have the dating precision necessary to test whether or not abrupt warming in Greenland was accompanied by synchronous climate changes beyond the Arctic. Speleothems, with their exceptional absolute chronologies, are well placed to conduct such a test.

Here we apply a change-point detection algorithm to new and published speleothem δ18O records of the YD from the Indo-Australian summer monsoon and Asian summer monsoon domains to compare the synchronicity of hydroclimate changes across the YD termination. The algorithm, which identifies the age (and its uncertainty) of a regime shift in a time series, was applied to the 13 - 11 ka interval of each speleothem record. The results yield an error-weighted mean YD-termination age of 11.55 ± 0.02 ka BP (2σ), supporting the hypothesis of a closely coupled monsoon seesaw. Analysis of the Greenland NGRIP ice-core δ18O and Ca2+ records on the GICC05 chronology for the same interval produces a YD-termination age of 11.63 ± 0.10 ka BP. Although the NGRIP and speleothem ages overlap within uncertainties, this hints at a possible Arctic lead over the tropics. However, if we apply a correction to the GICC05 chronology based on recent ice-core 10Be and tree-ring 14C synchronisation, the change-point analysis gives a NGRIP termination age of 11.57 ± 0.02 ka BP. This revised timing is consistent with the Cariaco Basin greyscale record (11.56 ± 0.02 ka BP). It also brings the NGRIP and Antarctic WAIS Divide ice-core CH4 records into perfect alignment across the transition. This assemblage of ages from geographically dispersed regions suggests that hydroclimate changes associated with the YD termination were synchronous, at least to within a couple of decades. It also calls for a revision to the onset age of the Greenlandian Stage (the Pleistocene-Holocene boundary).

How to cite: Drysdale, R., Griffiths, M., Hellstrom, J., Corrick, E., Woodhead, J., Sniderman, K., Rasmussen, S., Mueschler, R., and Capron, E.: Synchronous climate change between the Arctic and the Asian and Indo-Australian summer monsoon domains at the Younger Dryas termination, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12867, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12867, 2021.

EGU21-10772 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19 | Highlight

Northern Spain temperature constrained by fluid inclusion water isotopes in speleothems during the abrupt oscillations of the last deglaciation period

Juan Luis Bernal Wormull, Ana Moreno Caballud, Yuri Dubliansky, Christoph Spötl, Carlos Pérez-Mejías, Miguel Bartolomé, Eneko Iriarte, Martin Arriolabengoa, Arantza Aranburu, Isabel Cacho, Hai Cheng, and R. Lawrence Edwards

The last deglaciation (from ≈19 kyr BP to the onset of the Holocene) is a time interval characterized by major and abrupt climate changes mostly caused by the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) which is responsible for redistributing heat on a planetary scale, including the Iberian Peninsula. This study is focused in the Western Pyrenees, northern Spain, a southern European region key to understand Northern Hemisphere climate teleconnections associated to several warming and cooling events that took place abruptly. It is especially important to know when precisely these events occurred and what their amplitude was to better understand their causes and impacts on the regional environment.

The climatic events mentioned above are recorded in lake and marine sediments in the central and southern Europe denoting the importance of these records in the transitional zone between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean climatic realms. The glacial-interglacial transition was also identified in isotopic values of speleothems at this latitude, where differences and similarities with the patterns identified in the Greenland record during the last deglaciation are analysed. Even so, there is still no continental record of temperature reconstruction during part of the last deglaciation in the Iberian Peninsula that can be compared with the latest record of fluid inclusions in speleothems in central Europe (Affolter et al., 2019).

In this new study, three stalagmites from Ostolo Cave in the Western Pyrenees were analysed to identify and characterize the timing of the climate variability along the abrupt changes that punctuated the last deglaciation and subsequently generate a reconstruction of the past temperature with the help of fluid inclusion water isotopes. The samples were dated at high precision and cover almost continuously the same period (16.5-10 kyr BP) with a high degree of replication. The speleothem δ18O and fluid inclusion water isotopes (δD) records follow closely the well-known changes from high latitudes showing more negative values during GS-1 and H1, related to colder climates, while more positive values were reached during GI-1 and the Early Holocene, pointing towards warmer temperatures. Our Ostolo Cave fluid inclusion temperature record resembles Greenland and Mediterranean sea surface temperature trends and allows for the first time and from a continental record, a continuous reconstruction of temperature throughout the last deglaciation in southern Europe.

How to cite: Bernal Wormull, J. L., Moreno Caballud, A., Dubliansky, Y., Spötl, C., Pérez-Mejías, C., Bartolomé, M., Iriarte, E., Arriolabengoa, M., Aranburu, A., Cacho, I., Cheng, H., and Edwards, R. L.: Northern Spain temperature constrained by fluid inclusion water isotopes in speleothems during the abrupt oscillations of the last deglaciation period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10772, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10772, 2021.

EGU21-15940 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Centennial-scale climate variability inferred from Las Gloces cave in Central Pyrenees: evidences of rapid changes during last glacial cycle

Ana Moreno, Miguel Bartolomé, Carlos Sancho, Eneko Iriarte, Ánchel Belmonte, Isabel Cacho, Heather Stoll, Lawrence R. Edwards, and Hai Cheng

Paleoclimate records from the Pyrenees covering last glacial period are scarce since many lakes were covered by the glaciers, glacier deposits just provide discontinuous information and in very few caves we can find speleothem growth during that cold and generally dry time period. Las Gloces cave, located close to Ordesa and Monte Perdido National Park (Central Pyrenees, Iberian Peninsula) at 1240 m a.s.l., is one the few examples to study that time interval. Thus, for the first time, we present a speleothem in the Pyrenees that was growing during the Maximum Ice Extent in the last glacial period in a cave located just 3 km away from the glacier. Two speleothems from las Gloces were sampled, one covering the Holocene and last deglaciation (last 16.6 ka) and the other one growing from MIS4 (67.8 ka) to Mid-Holocene (4.7 ka), with two hiatuses at 50-47 ky and 30-21 ka coinciding with cold/dry periods. Both stalagmites were dated and analyzed for stable i sotopes and trace elements.

 

During MIS4, the lowest growth-rates correspond with Heinrich Stadial (HS) 6 while there is an increase in growth rate during MIS3 onset, reaching the maximum at Greenland Interstadial (GI)-14. After this, and corresponding with HS5, the growing stopped and it will reactivate again during GI-12, but with low growth rates. A new interruption took place 30 ka ago, with a second hiatus (30-21 ka), corresponding with an important retreat of Central Pyrenees glaciers and maximum regional aridity. During last glacial period, δ13C and δ18O records vary with rather small amplitude of change (4 ‰ and only 1‰, respectively) and showing low correlation between them indicating they were likely affected by different influences. At 21 ka BP, there is a new speleothem growth that will be characterized by the heaviest δ13C and δ18O values in the record (0‰ and -7‰, respectively) that occurred during the global LGM period.

 

Changes in the growth rate in those stalagmites could be related to precipitation oscillations during GS-GI cycles while the variation in δ13C could respond with changes in the temperature and rainfall on a glacial landscape with reduced vegetation cover. Differences in mean values of δ13C between MIS3 (-5‰) and Holocene (-9‰) represent a forest revegetation over the cave related with the climatic amelioration experienced during last deglaciation due to the increase in temperature and humidity. Drivers on δ18O change during MIS 3 are multiple and more complex but they may correspond to changes in amount of rainfall, temperature or moisture source. The drastic change in d18O during last deglaciation (from -10‰ at HS1 to -7 ‰ at the onset of the Holocene) could be additionally related to the well-known isotopic change of sea surface water due to the massive entrance of freshwater into the north Atlantic region.

How to cite: Moreno, A., Bartolomé, M., Sancho, C., Iriarte, E., Belmonte, Á., Cacho, I., Stoll, H., Edwards, L. R., and Cheng, H.: Centennial-scale climate variability inferred from Las Gloces cave in Central Pyrenees: evidences of rapid changes during last glacial cycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15940, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15940, 2021.

EGU21-9696 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Glacial climate variations in southwestern Iran, 50 to 10 ka

Mojgan Soleimani, Stacy Carolin, Alireza Nadimi, Gideon Henderson, and Christoph Spötl

Records of paleoclimate in the Middle East are particularly sparse in comparison with other regions around the world. In order to better resolve how Middle East climate responded to large global climate and environmental changes in the past, here we present the first glacial record of southwestern Iran climate constructed using speleothem climate proxies. We analyzed two stalagmites collected from a cave on the western side of the Zagros mountains, ~100 km north of the Persian Gulf. The average annual precipitation and temperature close to the cave site are ~350 mm and ~21.6 °C, respectively. Our data yield continuous δ18O and δ13C records from 45-35 kyr and 25-10 kyr BP, which show prominent millennial-scale events during the last glacial period and Termination I. The timing of these events is in agreement with North Atlantic Heinrich events and Greenland Daansgard-Oeschger events, within the respective records’ age errors. Moreover, unlike the generally stable NGRIP δ18O record, a proxy for high-latitude Northern Hemisphere temperatures, the stalagmite δ18O and δ13C records reveal clearly evident periodic variations during the Last Glacial Maximum. δ18O values are consistently heavier than eastern Mediterranean stalagmite δ18O values during both the glacial period and throughout Termination I, suggesting at least one source of moisture to the southwestern Iran site in addition to the westerlies.

How to cite: Soleimani, M., Carolin, S., Nadimi, A., Henderson, G., and Spötl, C.: Glacial climate variations in southwestern Iran, 50 to 10 ka, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9696, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9696, 2021.

EGU21-16120 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19

Subaqueous speleothems from the Flinders Ranges, South Australia, as palaeohydrological archives for the arid zone

Calla Gould-Whaley, Russell Drysdale, Jan-Hendrick May, John Hellstrom, Hai Cheng, Jon Woodhead, Alan Greig, Ellen Corrick, and Timothy Cohen

Australia is the driest continent outside of Antarctica yet relatively little is known about its long-term moisture history. Many local palaeoclimate archives suffer preservation problems, particularly in the arid centre of the continent, where weathering and erosion leave behind an incomplete record. In an attempt to redress the paucity of arid-zone palaeoclimate records, we investigate ‘pendulites’, subaqueous speleothems that grow episodically according to fluctuations in local groundwater levels. At Mairs Cave (central Flinders Ranges, South Australia), pendulites have formed around stalactites. During the first sustained episode of drowning, the stalactite is veneered by subaqueous calcite, sealing it and preventing further stalactitic growth after water levels fall. Once sealed, the pendulites only record periods of persistent drowning, assumed to correspond to major pluvial episodes.

Age data from two pendulite samples collected from close to the ceiling where the highest water levels have reached reveal two main groundwater ‘high-stand’ phases centred on ~67 and ~48 ka, coincident with Southern Hemisphere summer insolation maxima. This suggests that precession-driven southward migration of the ITCZ resulted in regular and persistent incursions of tropical air masses to the central Flinders Ranges. Trace element, stable isotope and growth-rate changes reveal that these orbitally controlled growth intervals are superimposed by regional climate responses to Dansgaard-Oeschger and Heinrich events. The results from Mairs Cave shed new light on the moisture history of central Australia, in particular the competing influences of tropical and middle-latitude circulation systems. This provides a precisely dated regional palaeoclimate template for reconstructing ecosystem changes, understanding human migration/dispersal patterns of the first Australians, and the progressive demise of megafauna. We also highlight the utility of subaqueous speleothems more generally as important archives for investigating arid-zone palaeoclimate.

How to cite: Gould-Whaley, C., Drysdale, R., May, J.-H., Hellstrom, J., Cheng, H., Woodhead, J., Greig, A., Corrick, E., and Cohen, T.: Subaqueous speleothems from the Flinders Ranges, South Australia, as palaeohydrological archives for the arid zone, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16120, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16120, 2021.

EGU21-4488 | vPICO presentations | CL1.19 | Highlight

The World Heritage Naracoorte Caves beyond 500 ka: U-Pb dating and charcoal analysis from speleothems with implications for Pleistocene vertebrate fossil deposits

Rieneke Weij, Jon Woodhead, Liz Reed, Kale Sniderman, John Hellstrom, and Russell Drysdale

Under the current rapid global warming, studying how environments responded to past climate change becomes increasingly important to better understand what impact climate variability has on regional flora and fauna. Our new multi-proxy study to the World Heritage Naracoorte Caves in southern Australia provides a unique window into the past climate as they are heavily decorated with speleothems but also contain in-fill deposits rich in Pleistocene vertebrate fossils including the extinct Australian megafauna. Until now, these speleothems have been dated using U-Th series and the fossil-bearing sediments with Optical Stimulated Luminescence and Electro Spin Resonance techniques, but only up to ca. 500 ka. We have U-Pb dated speleothems from the Naracoorte Caves for the first time and extended the record beyond 500 ka. We combined precise chronology with analyses of pollen and charcoal within the speleothems which allows us to better understand how southern Australia’s climate and its vegetation changed during the Quaternary. It also provides a unique insight into the timing and extent of cave opening with important potential for much older vertebrate fossil deposits than previously thought.

How to cite: Weij, R., Woodhead, J., Reed, L., Sniderman, K., Hellstrom, J., and Drysdale, R.: The World Heritage Naracoorte Caves beyond 500 ka: U-Pb dating and charcoal analysis from speleothems with implications for Pleistocene vertebrate fossil deposits, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4488, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4488, 2021.

CL2.1 – Climate Services - Underpinning Science

EGU21-4107 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Forecast of temperature-attributable mortality at lead times of up to 15 days for a very large ensemble of European regions

Marcos Quijal-Zamorano, Desislava Petrova, Xavier Rodó, Èrica Martinez-Solanas, and Joan Ballester

Implementing adequate health preventing measures is essential for public health decision making, particularly in the current context of rising temperatures. Most of the early warning systems are only based on climate data, and in very few cases they truly model the actual impact of the climate phenomena.

Here we establish, for the first-time, the theoretical basis for the development of operational heat-health early warning systems that combine climate and health data. We studied the predictability of Temperature Attributable Mortality (TAM) at lead times of up to 15 days for a very large ensemble of European regions. To achieve this goal, we analysed daily counts of all-cause mortality for the period 1998-2012 in 147 NUTS2 regions in 16 European countries, representing more than 400 million people, and daily high-resolution weather forecasts from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). We applied epidemiological models for the fitting of the temperature-mortality relationship in each of the regions, accounting for the different vulnerabilities and socio-demographic characteristics existing in Europe. We compared the predictive skill of the temperature and health forecasts on seasons and days with higher mortality risk. 

We conclude that the predictability of temperature can be used to issue skilful forecasts of TAM. In general, the predictability limit of temperature is similar to the one of TAM, which implies that the use of epidemiological models to transform the climate variables into health information does not reduce the lead time limit with significant forecast skill. Nonetheless, the spatial heterogeneity of the predictability lead time for TAM is higher than for temperature, especially in summer, where the complex shape of the temperature-mortality association amplifies the forecast errors. Overall, we find  a nearly-linear relationship between the predictability of temperature and TAM for different seasons and regions, suggesting that future improvements in the predictability of temperature could automatically lead to improvements in the predictability of TAM.

How to cite: Quijal-Zamorano, M., Petrova, D., Rodó, X., Martinez-Solanas, È., and Ballester, J.: Forecast of temperature-attributable mortality at lead times of up to 15 days for a very large ensemble of European regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4107, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4107, 2021.

EGU21-9563 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Determination of seasonal forecast skill in identifying extreme events of temperature, wind speed, and SPI

Massimiliano Palma, Franco Catalano, Irene Cionni, and Marcello Petitta

Renewable energy is the fastest-growing source of electricity globally, but climate variability and impacting events affecting the potential productivity of plants are obstacles to its integration and planning. Knowing a few months in advance the productivity of plants and the impact of extreme events on productivity and infrastructure can help operators and policymakers make the energy sector more resilient to climate variability, promoting the deployment of renewable energy while maintaining energy security.

The energy sector already uses weather forecasts up to 15 days for plant management; beyond this time horizon, climatologies are routinely used. This approach has inherent weaknesses, including the inability to predict extreme events, the prediction of which is extremely useful to decision-makers. Information on seasonal climate variability obtained through climate forecasts can be of considerable benefit in decision-making processes. The Climate Data Store of the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) provides seasonal forecasts and a common period of retrospective simulations (hindcasts) with equal spatial temporal resolution for simulations from 5 European forecast centres (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD), Meteo France (MF), UK Met Office (UKMO) and Euro-Mediterranean Centre on Climate Change (CMCC)), one US forecasting centre (NCEP) plus the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) model.

In this work, we analyse the skill and the accuracy of a subset of the operational seasonal forecasts provided by Copernicus C3S, focusing on three relevant essential climate variables for the energy sector: temperature (t2m), wind speed (sfcWind, relevant to the wind energy production), and precipitation. The latter has been analysed by taking the Standard Precipitation Index (SPI) into account.

First, the methodologies for bias correction have been defined. Subsequently, the reliability of the forecasts has been assessed using appropriate reliability indicators based on comparison with ERA5 reanalysis dataset. The hindcasts cover the period 1993-2017. For each of the variables considered, we evaluated the seasonal averages based on monthly means for two seasons: winter (DJF) and summer (JJA). Data have been bias corrected following two methodologies, one based on the application of a variance inflation technique to ensure the correction of the bias and the correspondence of variance between forecast and observation; the other based on the correction of the bias, the overall forecast variance and the ensemble spread as described in Doblas-Reyes et al. (2005).

Predictive ability has been assessed by calculating binary (Brier Skill Score, BSS hereafter, and Ranked Probability Skill Score, RPSS hereafter) and continuous (Continuous Ranked Probability Skill Score, CRPSS hereafter) scores. Forecast performance has been assessed using ERA 5 reanalysis as pseudo-observations. 

In this work we discuss the results obtained with different bias correction techniques highlighting the outcomes obtained analyzing the BSS for the first and the last terciles and the first and the last percentiles (10th and 90th). This analysis has the goal to identify the regions in which the seasonal forecast can be used to identify potential extreme events.

How to cite: Palma, M., Catalano, F., Cionni, I., and Petitta, M.: Determination of seasonal forecast skill in identifying extreme events of temperature, wind speed, and SPI, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9563, 2021.

EGU21-10981 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Multi-year prediction of drought and heat stress to support decision making in the wheat sector

Balakrishnan Solaraju-Murali, Nube Gonzalez-Reviriego, Louis-Philippe Caron, Andrej Ceglar, Andrea Toreti, Matteo Zampieri, and Francisco Javier Doblas-Reyes

Unfavorable and extreme climate events such as drought and heat stress affect wheat production and food security globally. Predicting such climate events in the next decade is of great interest for decision-makers, as this time horizon coincides with the strategic planning of many stakeholders in the wheat sector. To address this, we assess the forecast quality in predicting the evolution of drought and heat stress conditions using two proxy user-oriented drought and heat stress indicators: Standardized Potential Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI6) and Heat Magnitude Day Index (HMDI3) on a multi-annual timescale (forecast years 1 to 5). In particular, we present the probabilistic skill and reliability of decadal forecast to predict these indices for the months preceding wheat harvest on a global spatial scale. We use decadal forecasts from the Community Earth System Model Decadal Prediction Large Ensemble (CESM-DPLE), which contributes to the Decadal Climate Prediction Project (DCPP) of CMIP6. Following this, we demonstrate the potential applicability of these forecasts to enhance the adaptation and mitigation activities in the wheat sector by presenting the forecast of multi-year averaged SPEI6 and HMDI3 based on categorical events for the period 2016-2020 along with the corresponding observational values.

How to cite: Solaraju-Murali, B., Gonzalez-Reviriego, N., Caron, L.-P., Ceglar, A., Toreti, A., Zampieri, M., and Doblas-Reyes, F. J.: Multi-year prediction of drought and heat stress to support decision making in the wheat sector, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10981, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10981, 2021.

EGU21-7767 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Return period analysis to assess the long-term impact of climate change on olive sector in Andalusia, Spain - results from the Med-Gold project

Myrto Gratsea, Konstantinos Varotsos, Javier Lopez-Nevado, Silvia Lopez-Feria, and Christos Giannakopoulos

Return period analysis to assess the long-term impact of climate change on olive sector in Andalusia, Spain - results from the Med-Gold project

M. Gratsea1, K. V. Varotsos1, J. López-Nevado2, S. López-Feria2, C. Giannakopoulos1

1 Institute for Environmental Research and Sustainable Development, National Observatory of Athens, Greece

2 DCOOP Sociedad Cooperativa, Andalusia, Spain

 Abstract

Med-Gold project, aims to develop climate services for olive, grape and durum wheat crops, which are the hallmarks of the Mediterranean food system. The generated climate related information at different timescales will be exploited by the end-users for operational decision-making. The objective of this study is to employ the return period method for communicating the effect of climate change on the olive crops in the long-term in Andalusia, which is one of the most important olive growing areas worldwide. Therefore, return periods of bad years in terms of olive yield and olive fly risk are being calculated for the reference period 1971-2000 and for the near (2031-2060) and distant future (2071-2100) under the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 emission scenarios using an ensemble of five bias-corrected Regional Climate Models. The identification of the bad years - and the corresponding thresholds - is based on observational data from five monitoring stations in Andalusia (Malaga, Granada, Sevilla, Cordoba and Jaen) and the role of certain meteorological parameters (precipitation, temperature, relative humidity) is investigated. The results indicate an overall tendency for increased occurrence probability of bad years in terms of yield due to future higher temperatures and decreased precipitation. The impact is more pronounced towards the end of the century and under the RCP8.5 future emission scenario.

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 776467.

How to cite: Gratsea, M., Varotsos, K., Lopez-Nevado, J., Lopez-Feria, S., and Giannakopoulos, C.: Return period analysis to assess the long-term impact of climate change on olive sector in Andalusia, Spain - results from the Med-Gold project, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7767, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7767, 2021.

EGU21-9527 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Selecting climate projections for services: the DRIAS-2020 dataset

Lola Corre, Samuel Somot, Jean-Michel Soubeyroux, Sébastien Bernus, Agathe Drouin, Brigitte Dubuisson, Pierre Etchevers, Viviane Gouget, Patrick Josse, Maryvonne Kerdoncuff, Raphaëlle Samacoits, Flore Tocquer, Christian Pagé, Aurélien Ribes, and Robert Vautard

The French National Climate Service “Drias, futures of climate” was launched in 2012, as a response of the French scientific community to society’s need for climatic information. It is mainly composed of a website that provides easy access to the best available climate data to characterize climate change over France. Latest advances developed in 2020 include the availability of a new set of regional climate scenarios corrected by a quantile-mapping based method with correction depending on the weather regime. As for the previous set, the climate projections are based on the EURO-CORDEX ensemble, whose contents have been greatly enriched over the past years. Singular effort was done to build a robust and synthetic set that well represents the uncertainties of climate change over France. The different criteria defined to select the simulations will be presented, and the range of the projected climate change will be examined, with respect to larger ensembles.

 

How to cite: Corre, L., Somot, S., Soubeyroux, J.-M., Bernus, S., Drouin, A., Dubuisson, B., Etchevers, P., Gouget, V., Josse, P., Kerdoncuff, M., Samacoits, R., Tocquer, F., Pagé, C., Ribes, A., and Vautard, R.: Selecting climate projections for services: the DRIAS-2020 dataset, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9527, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9527, 2021.

EGU21-16352 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Evaluating the quality of model-based regional climate information: the case of the UK Climate Projections 2018

Marina Baldissera Pacchetti, Suraje Dessai, Seamus Bradley, and David A. Stainforth

The kind of long-term regional climate information that is increasingly important for making adaptation decisions varies in temporal and spatial resolution, and this information is usually derived from Global Climate models (GCMs). However, information about future changes in regional climate also comes with high degrees of uncertainty–an important element of the information given the high decision stakes of climate change adaptation.

 

Given these considerations, Baldissera Pacchetti et al. (in press) have proposed a quality assessment framework for evaluating the quality of regional climate information that intends to inform decision making. Evaluating the quality of this information is particularly important for information that is passed on to decision makers in the form of climate services. The framework has five dimensions along which quality can be assessed: diversity, completeness, theory, adequacy for purpose and transparency.  

 

Here, we critically evaluate this framework by applying it to one example of climate information for adaptation: the UK Climate Projections of 2018 (UKCP18). There are two main motivations for the choice of UKCP18. First, this product embodies some of the main modeling strategies that drive the field of climate science today. For example, the land projections produced by UKCP18 provide probabilistic uncertainty assessments using multi-model and perturbed physics ensembles (MME and PPE), use locally developed GCMs and the models from the international Climate Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP), perform dynamical downscaling for producing information at the regional scale and further fine grain information with convection permitting models. Second, the earlier version of the UK Climate Projections (UKCP09) has received criticism from philosophers of science. The quality assessment framework proposed by Baldissera Pacchetti et al. partly aims to reveal whether the pitfalls identified by philosophers in UKCP09 persist in UKCP18.

 

We apply the quality assessment framework to four strands of the UKCP18 land projections and illustrate whether and to what extent each of these strands satisfies the quality dimensions of the framework. When appropriate, we show whether quality varies depending on the variable of interest within a particular strand or across strands. For example, the theory quality dimension highlights that epistemic quality along this dimension is better satisfied for estimates about variables that depend on thermodynamic principles (e.g. global average temperature) than fluid dynamical theory (e.g. precipitation) (see, e.g., Risbey and O’Kane 2011) independently of the strand under assessment. We conclude that for those dimensions that can be evaluated, UKCP18 is not sufficiently epistemically reliable to provide information of high quality for all of the products provided.

How to cite: Baldissera Pacchetti, M., Dessai, S., Bradley, S., and Stainforth, D. A.: Evaluating the quality of model-based regional climate information: the case of the UK Climate Projections 2018, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16352, 2021.

EGU21-10674 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Climadjust: easing the Bias Adjustment process through a user-friendly web service

Juan José Sáenz de la Torre, Elena Suárez, David Iglesias, Iván Sánchez, Antonio Pérez, Max Tuni, Markel García, Daniel San-Martín, Maialen Iturbide, and José Manuel Gutiérrez

Climate projections obtained from global and regional climate models usually exhibit biases: systematic deviations from observations. Adjusting these biases is typically the first step towards obtaining actionable climate information to be used in impact studies. However, this bias adjustment process is highly technical and demands a lot of resources, both infrastructures (e.g. access to high performance and cloud computing) —particularly for continental wide applications— and human (e.g. personnel specialised in climate data post-processing).

Climadjust (accessible through https://climadjust.com/) is a web service developed with the support of the Copernicus Climate Change Service  implementing user-friendly bias adjustment for climate projections from the C3S catalogue using customized methods and reference datasets. The service was developed by Predictia —a company with a strong focus on climate services development and climate modelling— in collaboration with the Spanish Research Council (CSIC). 

Climadjust provides scalable cloud resources to compute bias-adjusted climate projections from the ensembles of CMIP and CORDEX datasets or customized areas of interest. In this process, the users are able to (i) upload their own dataset of observations to adjust the climate projections, or choose among reference datasets such as ERA5-Land or WFDE-5, (ii) choose among six state-of-the-art Bias Adjustment techniques implemented using the open source Climate4R package, and (iii) validate the results through the standard framework developed in the European VALUE COST Action. The output is a validated netCDF file, ready to be used by the climate modellers working in climate studies.

This climate service is targeted at the end tail of the downstream market of climate services, namely climate modellers working in sectoral climate adaptation in the agriculture, hydrology, biodiversity, insurance and forestry management fields, among others. Currently, the service counts with over 100 registered users.

To promote the user uptake of the service, the project faced several barriers, such as a lack of understanding on the need of adjusting biases by the end-users, and communication barriers between the climate science community and the end-user community. The session will present the lessons learnt during the user uptake campaigns, the user needs gathered through the user engagement activities performed within it, as well as relevant use-cases of the service, developed hand in hand with the end users.

How to cite: Sáenz de la Torre, J. J., Suárez, E., Iglesias, D., Sánchez, I., Pérez, A., Tuni, M., García, M., San-Martín, D., Iturbide, M., and Gutiérrez, J. M.: Climadjust: easing the Bias Adjustment process through a user-friendly web service, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10674, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10674, 2021.

EGU21-1140 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

User involvement to prepare a Pan-European climate visualisation platform targeted at decision makers and educational purposes

Andreas Hoy, Zbigniew Ustrnul, Agnieszka Wypych, Evgeny Gordov, Yulia Gordova, and Elin Leander

This contribution relates to preparatory efforts for creating a transnational, multilinguistic visualisation tool of past, present, forecasted and future (weather and) climate information in Europe, targeted to a large range of users. There is no scarcity of observed or modelled climate data, especially in Europe. However, existing climate information are often hidden, poorly explained or not accessible (in their complexity and structure) for non-scientists in many countries, especially in Eastern Europe and Russia. Needed are hence clear, reliable, and concise facts to easily understand the complex topic of climate change, supported by a high spatial resolution of climate information for local concernment.

We identified two superordinated target groups: 1) decision makers, demanding easily accessible and digestible, as well as for decision making processes usable climate information and 2) educational institutions and the general public, who will profit from more intuitive ways teaching and informing about climate change. We here present results of a user survey carried out in five countries (in native language) and of key stakeholder interviews within the same countries.

In the surveys, we approached potential users within different countries to explore what climate data they need, in which complexity, spatio-temporal detail, actuality and visualisation style. We also aimed to explore if similar actors of different countries may have similar or different needs, and how we may prepare an optimal product useful for a large range of users located in different countries. Follow-up key stakeholder interviews helped us deepening the level of understanding of user needs. Such interviews allowed us to go into more details than the questionnaire. It also enabled us to present the users content of existing webpages presenting climate information, to identify what the users like, dislike or miss in existing tools - e.g., in terms of data visualisation, handling, comparison and comprehensiveness. Coordinating country partners served as multipliers to reach users in their national language and to evaluate the results. Those activities disseminated the ideas of our planned platform in those countries and between different users there.

How to cite: Hoy, A., Ustrnul, Z., Wypych, A., Gordov, E., Gordova, Y., and Leander, E.: User involvement to prepare a Pan-European climate visualisation platform targeted at decision makers and educational purposes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1140, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1140, 2021.

EGU21-4032 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1 | Highlight

Climate normals and climate change: how to communicate these together?

Janette Bessembinder, Bernadet Overbeek, and Peter Siegmund

Meteorological institutes all over the world are publishing new “climate normals” in 2021, as prescribed by the World Meteorological Organization. These “climate normals”, averages over the period 1991-2020, generally have higher temperatures than the previous climate normals over the period 1981-2010 or earlier 30-year periods. As a consequence, in weather forecasts from 2021 the expected temperatures for the coming days and weeks are less often “above normal”, compared to earlier years. In the Netherlands there has been already a lot of discussion about these “climate normals”. Several people, including climate researchers and weather providers, object to them, since they say that these “normals” obscure climate change. Especially the word “normals” is what bothers them, since the current state of the climate should not be considered normal. At KNMI we understand this problem, although we also see the importance of providing regular updates of the description of the “current” climate. Many aspects in society are designed and operated taking into account the averages and extremes in the current climate. Climate is an important aspect in almost any sector, from water management, agriculture to super markets and theme parks. Several visualizations (climate dashboard and weather and climate plume) are developed at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) that combine information on “climate normals”, past and future climate change and weather forecasts.

During the presentation examples of the above described visualizations are shown and the advantages and disadvantages are described. Suggestions are presented on how to communicate about “climate normals” and climate change.

How to cite: Bessembinder, J., Overbeek, B., and Siegmund, P.: Climate normals and climate change: how to communicate these together?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4032, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4032, 2021.

EGU21-7750 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1 | Highlight

Visualisation in climate services: status and recommendations

Marta Terrado, Diana Urquiza, Sara Octenjak, Andria Nicodemou, Dragana Bojovic, Luz Calvo, and Isadora Christel

The visual communication of climate information is one of the cornerstones of climate services. Characteristics that make a climate service self-explanatory rely on the visual modes it employs, e.g. maps, graphs or infographics, and the visual channels applied for the translation of multidimensional data, e.g. combination of colours, shapes or slopes. 

Climate scientists have traditionally used predetermined types of visualisations to present climate data, including flood maps, heat maps or choropleth maps. However, such a tradition neglects a plethora of stakeholders (e.g. businesses, policy makers, citizens) that are increasingly involved in climate adaptation and that are less familiar with the traditional ways of presenting these data. In this sense, there is a need to advance towards climate services visualisations that can guide climate change adaptation decisions by helping users to interpret and use the information as simply and quickly as possible.

Effective visualisations should achieve a balance between the amount of represented data, its robustness (i.e. the representation of scientific confidence and consensus) and saliency (i.e. the relevance of the information to user needs). Therefore, choices regarding the representation of probabilities (e.g. using terciles or information on extreme events), the representation of uncertainty (e.g. showing the ensemble range or filtering by a skill threshold), the type of visual encoding (e.g. selection of the colour palette, use of shapes and sizes) as well as the terminology and language used, are some aspects that can significantly impact the way users interpret climate data.

We describe the main challenges for the visualisation of climate services identified during a visualisation workshop with representatives from 22 climate services projects involved in the Climateurope network, an EU-funded coordination and support action. In break-out group discussions, participants shared their experiences in the development of effective climate services visualisations and the lessons learned. Findings show that the chosen representation of uncertainty and probabilities tends to be case specific and that there is a preference for interactive visualisations where information is gradually disclosed. Minimising the use of technical concepts in visualisations was highlighted as an objective that requires further attention. The analysis of the obtained results provides a picture of the current status of the climate services visualisation field in Europe and gives recommendations for the development of the next generation of climate services.

How to cite: Terrado, M., Urquiza, D., Octenjak, S., Nicodemou, A., Bojovic, D., Calvo, L., and Christel, I.: Visualisation in climate services: status and recommendations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7750, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7750, 2021.

EGU21-10901 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Thermal Assessment Tool: A climate service to visualize trends of risk events related to cold snaps and heatwaves

Blas Lajarín, Nieves Peña, Jorge Paz, Edward P. Morris, Greta C. Vega, Estefanía Casal, Martin Dubuisson, Luisa Teixeira, and Efrén Feliu

The Thermal Assessment Tool has been developed within the framework of a Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) contract, titled Climate Change Dashboards for Decision Makers, to provide an interactive and informative dashboard to allow users to visualize the frequency and severity of risk events related to cold snaps and heatwaves. The tool is based on historical, seasonal forecast and long-term projections datasets, available through C3S Climate Data Store (CDS). It reduces the need for repetitive complex climate data analysis, thereby saving time and effort in the decision-making process.

Climate change has already impacted ecosystems and humans, and it is foreseeing that will lead to an increase in the number and intensity of extreme weather events, including heatwaves and cold snaps. These may bring temperatures that are significantly warmer or colder than average that may cause impacts such as thermal discomfort, lack of productivity, more energy consumption and/or health problems. To reduce or at least mitigate these impacts added-value information regarding the risks of extreme temperatures is needed to make proper decisions to prepare, protect and prevent the city and citizens.

For this purpose, the Thermal Assessment Tool provides a customized dashboard that allows users to visualize heatwaves, cold snaps and thermal comfort based on long-term projections and seasonal forecasts. The tool also presents an interactive map and a time series visualization identifying the magnitude of these three variables. This reduces the need for repetitive complex climate data analysis, thereby saving time and effort in the decision-making processes. Information on the frequency and severity of future extreme temperature events can also assist with planning.

The tool showcases how to analyze, process and simplify large volumes of data through different maps and plots that make it easier to understand climate indicators (about the past, present or future). Local governments and other decision-makers, as well as actors in housing development and management, urban planning, and insurance can refer to the tool to complement their usual information systems with additional quality-assured insights that they can act on.

Acknowledgments: We would like to thank the C3S for funding this project and the participants in the various workshops mentioned below: Ayuntamiento de Bilbao, Ihobe y la Oficina Española de Cambio Climático.

How to cite: Lajarín, B., Peña, N., Paz, J., Morris, E. P., Vega, G. C., Casal, E., Dubuisson, M., Teixeira, L., and Feliu, E.: Thermal Assessment Tool: A climate service to visualize trends of risk events related to cold snaps and heatwaves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10901, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10901, 2021.

EGU21-16350 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1 | Highlight

Overcoming conflicting notions of climate forecasts reliability and skill in the agricultural sector: lessons from the MED-GOLD project

Sandro Calmanti, Marta Bruno Soares, Alessandro Dell’Aquila, Luigi Ponti, Matteo De Felice, Nube González-Reviriego, Raül Marcos-Matamoros, Marta Terrado, António Graça, Natacha Fontes, Marta Teixeira, Chiara Monotti, Javier López Nevado, and Valentina Manstretta

During the project MED-GOLD, whose aim is to co-develop pilot climate services for three staple Mediterranean agri-food systems: grape, olive and durum wheat, key challenges emerged in the process of identifying useful climate indicators and actionable definitions of the reliability of climate information. To address such conflicting notion of the reliability of climate information, a participatory workshop was organised with providers (mainly climate scientists) and users of climate data and information (representatives from agri-food companies but also providers of agromet services for farmers) to facilitate an open discussion and find ways of moving forward methodologically and practically towards the development of prototype services. We found that the scientists and users had very different conceptions and interpretations of terms such as skill and reliability of climate information. Furthermore, such disparate understandings created a level of friction between what the scientists understood as scientifically robust and credible climate information and what the users required in terms of saliency of the climate information developed in order to effectively support their decisions. Through an iterative and open discussion, scientists and users agreed the decision making landscape and on a notion of reliability of climate predictions connected to the type of decisions that climate information would support. We will describes the process of developing a common understanding on working definitions of the reliability of climate predictions in the MED-GOLD project and, provide a practical example of the application of this definition to a real case study focused on durum wheat cultivation in Italy.

How to cite: Calmanti, S., Bruno Soares, M., Dell’Aquila, A., Ponti, L., De Felice, M., González-Reviriego, N., Marcos-Matamoros, R., Terrado, M., Graça, A., Fontes, N., Teixeira, M., Monotti, C., López Nevado, J., and Manstretta, V.: Overcoming conflicting notions of climate forecasts reliability and skill in the agricultural sector: lessons from the MED-GOLD project, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16350, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16350, 2021.

Due to the pervasive nature of climate change impacts, and their relevance for human welfare, climate services delivering advanced knowledge of climate change and variation are crucial. They aid informed decision-making at relevant spatial and timescale and to improve prevention, preparation, adaptation, and minimize residual damages. It is also imperative to evaluate the climate services with a view to quantify the economic value added of these services. Particularly crucial is to assess how the decision-making process of the service end users would unfold with and without the service to identify its differential impact on properly selected indicators of performance.

The co-generation (also called co-creation) in products and services was made popular by the business literature in the early 2000s and represents a conceptual shift from an emphasis on output to an emphasis on a mutually satisfying relational process between developers and users in service creation. It mainly consists of four stages, namely co-design, co-development, co-delivery, and co-evaluation. The stage of co-evaluation refers to the development and application of agreed upon criteria for the measurement of results. The criteria will touch upon both substantial and procedural issues. From a user perspective, it will be important to evaluate relevance, impact/benefits, utility, credibility, and costs (financial and human resources) in using climate services. These elements are important to assess the effectiveness and uptake of the service and possibly refine it towards these goals. From a developer perspective, important aspects to evaluate will include, for instance, the scientific quality of the service or its skill.

This presentation introduces the lessons learnt in the context of the H2020 project CLARA (Climate forecast enabled knowledge services) on how to effectively implement the interactions among researchers, end users and service developers to unveil the economic value added of climate services.

How to cite: Delpiazzo, E.: Co-Evaluation as a step in the Co-Generation of Climate Services.  An analysis of the CLARA experience, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7364, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7364, 2021.

EGU21-7570 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

The role of knowledge networks in facilitating the creation of climate information services

Francesca Larosa and Marta Bruno-Soares

Knowledge networks are collections of individuals who work together across organizational, spatial and disciplinary boundaries to develop and share a body of knowledge. Climate services are tools and applications that help support decision-making by transforming climate data into information tailored to specific users. They call for co-development practices to facilitate successful collaboration between different stakeholders. Knowledge networks for climate services are intermediaries that can facilitate the interaction between upstream (providers) and downstream (users) actors operating at various scales (local, national, regional and supranational). Such knowledge networks can therefore assist decision-making processes of a wide set of users by creating networking opportunities and disseminating usable climate information. The aim of this work is to frame and assess the efficiency of knowledge networks for climate services in promoting innovation and facilitate its diffusion. We used semi-structured interviews with knowledge networks managers to collect information about their purpose, process and audience.  We then assess the efficiency of knowledge networks by performing content analysis of interviews with knowledge network managers and by checking for the existence of inconsistencies or gaps with the initial objectives. We find that knowledge networks for climate services pursue four objectives: coordination, innovation promotion, science-policy interface and support to members. We also find that knowledge networks are well-recognised players in disseminating knowledge and opportunities to climate services practitioners and policy makers. However, we observe a lack of adequate tools to monitor the activities of different members. On the communication side, knowledge networks for climate services mostly interact with developers of climate services but face challenges in sharing members’ activities with users. Our work fills a significant knowledge gap and helps providing new tools of performance assessment in absence of a clearly defined methodology. The identification of bottlenecks and under-performing mechanisms in the climate information services sphere allows the elaboration of strategies to improve the status quo and facilitates the diffusion of innovations such as climate services.

How to cite: Larosa, F. and Bruno-Soares, M.: The role of knowledge networks in facilitating the creation of climate information services, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7570, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7570, 2021.

EGU21-15813 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Climate services for the retail sectors: the Filomena’s case

Albert Martínez Botí, Lluís Palma, Francesc Roura, Andrea Manrique-Suñén, Nube González-Reviriego, Raül Marcos, Sergio González, Antonio López, and Albert Soret

The need of filling the gap between medium-range weather (up to 10-15 days) and seasonal forecasts (3–6 months) has led to several operational weather and climate centres to include the subseasonal forecasting in their predictions. Although this kind of information is starting to be explored by some stakeholders, such as renewable energy, water management, agriculture or disaster prevention, there are still much more sectors who can exploit this information. In this contribution, we will present how this type of climate information is used by the retail sector, in particular by a well known French sporting goods retailer within their operations over Spain. Having reliable climate forecasts weeks in advance would allow to manage the stock, redistribute it along with different warehouses and take different advertising campaigns and prices policies to avoid both the extra-cost that implies keeping what is not sold and running out of products. A recent proof of the influence of climate on sporting goods sales has been evidenced by the large increase in sales of mountain and snow equipment during Filomena’s episode, which violently hit the south-west, centre and north-east of the Iberian Peninsula in January 2021. Trustworthy subseasonal forecasts could be equally useful during other times of the year to make some decisions, such as extending or shortening the summer sports season. To illustrate the potential of these types of climate predictions, a case study for the Filomena event in January 2021 is presented. The sub-seasonal NCEP-CFS v2 prediction system has been used to compute the probability of each tercile category for surface temperature (above-normal, below-normal or normal - where normal is the average over a reference period). Forecasts for weekly temperature were calibrated using as reference the ERA-5 reanalysis dataset and the regions with negative skill were masked. It is interesting to point out how the predictions issued three weeks in advance already indicated that surface temperature would be below normal over Spain.

How to cite: Martínez Botí, A., Palma, L., Roura, F., Manrique-Suñén, A., González-Reviriego, N., Marcos, R., González, S., López, A., and Soret, A.: Climate services for the retail sectors: the Filomena’s case, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15813, 2021.

EGU21-4399 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Seasonal climate predictions for marine risk assessment in the Barents Sea

Iuliia Polkova, Laura Schaffer, Øivin Aarnes, and Johanna Baehr

Marine risk embraces an assessment of likelihoods and consequences of impacts from climate fluctuations in order to identify time and regions vulnerable to climate hazards. This information can support sustainable and safe marine activities. The marine risk assessment is a part of the marine service provided by the DNV GL (short for Det Norske Veritas and Germanischer Lloyd). In their current risk application, likelihoods of extreme conditions on the sea are based on historical observations and atmospheric reanalyses. We assess predicted likelihoods of extreme conditions over 1990-2017 in the boreal summer (prediction months 2-4) from the seasonal forecast system provided by the German Meteorological Service (DWD). We chose summer as it represents the time of the open-water season, when the highest marine activity in the Barents Sea takes place. We selected three indicators from the marine risk assessment. Two of them represent meteorological properties such as wind speed and 2-meter temperature (T2m). The third indicator – the wind chill index (WCI) is a combination of the previous two and represents heat loss from the human body to its surroundings during cold and windy weather. As expected, the prediction skill assessment suggests different levels of predictability for the three indicators, with T2m having the highest skill followed by WCI and wind speed. The prediction skill represents the "trust layer" superimposed on the predicted likelihoods and used as input fields for marine risk assessment. From the likelihood maps for the test period of summer 2020 follows that large areas of the Barents Sea represent favorable conditions for marine operations considering high prediction skill and low likelihood for extreme WCI (>1000 W/m2) and T2m (<0 °C) conditions in July and August. The wind speed (>13.9 m/s) is poorly predictable beyond the first lead month. Thus, if risk assessment is based on a suite of climate indicators with the heterogeneous prediction skill, the total risk assessment might be limited by the skill of the indicator with the lowest prediction skill. However, not all climate indicators are equally contributing to the risk assessment. The study describes a workflow for application of seasonal climate predictions and points to a few lessons learned, which can be useful to future climate services.

How to cite: Polkova, I., Schaffer, L., Aarnes, Ø., and Baehr, J.: Seasonal climate predictions for marine risk assessment in the Barents Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4399, 2021.

EGU21-9917 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Tailored seasonal snow forecasts for ski centers in Finland

Otto Hyvärinen and Andrea Vajda

In Finland, the ski industry is facing an increased vulnerability to climate change and variability, especially in southern and central regions. The late start and the early end of snowing season and the difficulties in artificial snow production due to high winter temperatures have significant impacts on winter tourism. As part of INDECIS project, Finnish Meteorological Institute developed and tested seasonal forecasts with Finnish ski centers, providing support in maintenance practices. In the beginning of the pilot, a workshop was organized representatives of the ski resorts, where the most useful indices were selected, uncertainties related to variables used in the development of indices were presented to the users and the visualization and delivery of climate outlooks were agreed. In this presentation, we will assess the quality of snow forecast and present the developed seasonal snow outlooks. 

The ECMWF long-range forecasts (SEAS5) were quality assessed and several bias-adjusted methods analysed. Finally, the raw snow forecast was bias-adjusted using the EMOS method. The forecasts were the monthly mean snow depth, and the probability of ≥1 cm of monthly mean snow depth. The forecasts were evaluated using the CRPSS. The results depend much on the season. For example, Lead month 0 and month 1 forecasts in February showed skill over most of Finland, while Lead month 0 and month 1 forecasts in November were not as skilful. 

The developed seasonal climate outlooks were tested by the users during November 2019-April 2020; following the test period a feedback survey was conducted with the users. How the perceived usefulness of forecasts transfers to the decisions made by the users is not so straight-forward. According to the feedback received only one user of the four repliers changed their plans based on the provided outlooks, and half of the respondents couldn't say if they changed their activities in any way.

How to cite: Hyvärinen, O. and Vajda, A.: Tailored seasonal snow forecasts for ski centers in Finland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9917, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9917, 2021.

EGU21-2709 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Supporting Long-Term Decision Making in Plant Production in Serbia

Mirjam Vujadinović Mandić, Ana Vuković Vimić, Marija Ćosić, Zorica Ranković-Vasić, Vladimir Djurdjević, and Dragan Nikolić

Agriculture is exposed to numerous risks related to climate change. Extreme weather events, such as droughts, heat waves, intensive rainfall and floods, as well as slow changes (increased temperatures, changes in precipitation regime and generally increased climate variability) affect the year-to-year stability of quality and quantity of the plant production.

Serbia is located in one of the regions that are recognized as hot spots where climate change unfolds faster than the global average. A survey completed by more than 100 agricultural producers in Serbia showed that in the last 20 years they were affected by mostly negative impact of climate change and suffered reduced quality and/or quantity of yields, mostly from droughts, high summer temperatures, spring frosts and storms with strong winds and hail.

Adaptation measures applied to reduce the risks of extreme weather events are mainly those subsidized by the Government (anti-hail nets, irrigation systems, etc.), recommended by the Agriculture Advisory Service or other independent expert (tillage methods, sowing time, time and water amount used for irrigation, use of fertilizers, etc.), as well as those learn from their own past experience (selection of varieties, crop rotation).

Most respondents regularly follow short-term weather forecasts from various sources and plan field activities accordingly. They are mainly familiar with the monthly forecast issued by the Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia (RHMSS), which is also published by several newspapers. This forecast is based on the statistical method of analogies and the producers believe that they cannot rely on it in long-term planning. In general, they lack confidence in the long-term weather forecasts, mainly due to the fact that over the past years Serbian media were overwhelmed with tendentious seasonal forecasts from unreliable sources.

On the other hand, the survey showed that many producers would appreciate and use the seasonal weather outlooks if it was tailored according to their specific needs considering species they cultivate and local climate characteristics. They would like clearly presented information, in simple graph or map form, followed by textual advices on agro-technical measures they could adopt in order to reduce foreseen weather-related risks.

Integrated Agro-meteorological Prediction System (IAPS) is a project financed by the Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia through the Program for excellent project of young researchers (PROMIS) that aims to reduce the risk of weather-related events and increase climate resilience of Serbian agriculture, as well as to advance the use of climate information by producers and agricultural advisers in long-term planning. The idea is to create a coupled system od dynamically downscaled seasonal weather forecasts and crop models, accompanied with a set of products specifically tailored to support long-term decision making in agriculture. At the end of the project, the developed system and its products will be offered to RHMSS to include in the operative forecast system.

Acknowledgement: This research is supported by the Science Fund of the Republic of the Republic of Serbia, through PROMIS project “Integrated Agro-Meteorological Prediction System” (IAPS), grant no 6062629.

How to cite: Vujadinović Mandić, M., Vuković Vimić, A., Ćosić, M., Ranković-Vasić, Z., Djurdjević, V., and Nikolić, D.: Supporting Long-Term Decision Making in Plant Production in Serbia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2709, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2709, 2021.

EGU21-4218 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Impact of climate change on renewable energy over the Mediterranean and Canary Islands: SOCLIMPACT H2020 project.

Claudia Gutiérrez, Alba de la Vara, Juan Jesús González-Alemán, and Miguel Ángel Gaertner

The enhanced vulnerability of insular regions to climate change highlights the importance of undertaking adaptation and mitigation strategies according to the specific singularities of the islands. Islands are highly dependent on energy imports and the transition to a system with higher shares of renewable energies, in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in these regions, can also reduce the external energy dependence. In this context, the assessment of the impact of climate change on renewable energy resources during the 21st century is crucial for policymakers and stakeholders, due to the increasing vulnerability of the system to climate variability. The aim of this work is to provide an overview of wind and photovoltaic (PV) resources, their variability and complementarity between them, as well as their future changes, in the Euro-Mediterranean and Canary islands. Due to the limitations in land surface availability in the islands for the installation of renewable energy capacity, the analysis is extended to offshore wind and photovoltaic energy, which may have an important role in the future increases of renewable energy share. Variability is assessed through the analysis of energy droughts (low-productivity periods). In addition, a case study for optimization of wind and solar combination over the Canary islands is performed. In that sense, a sensitivity test is developed to find the optimal combination of PV and wind that reduce energy droughts and the persistence of that conditions at a local scale. To that end, we use climate variables from a series of regional climate simulations derived from Euro-CORDEX and MENA-CORDEX for the RCP2.6 and RCP8.5 emission scenarios and for the periods 2046-2065 and 2081-2100. The obtained results are very dependent on the region analyzed. Whereas an overall decrease is projected in wind resource over the Mediterranean islands for the future, an increase is projected for the Canarian archipelago. Changes in PV productivity are small in any case, as well as variability changes. These results, which are part of the SOCLIMPACT H2020 project, highlight the importance of targeting climate information and give condensed and valuable data to facilitate climate-related policy decision making for decarbonization and Blue Growth in the islands.

How to cite: Gutiérrez, C., de la Vara, A., González-Alemán, J. J., and Gaertner, M. Á.: Impact of climate change on renewable energy over the Mediterranean and Canary Islands: SOCLIMPACT H2020 project., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4218, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4218, 2021.

EGU21-6236 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

The City Pack - the co-production of an urban climate service providing local summaries of a city's future climate 

Elizabeth Fuller, Claire Scannell, Victoria Ramsey, Rebecca Parfitt, and Nicola Golding

In 2018, the UN estimated that around 55% of the world’s population currently live within urban areas, with this value projected to rise to 60% by 2030 (United Nations, 2018). High levels of urbanisation, coupled with an increasing trend in extreme weather under future climate change scenarios, combine to create significant challenges to increasing urban resilience for the future (Masson et al., 2020).

Urban climate services provide tools to support decision making at a range of scales across the city, from day-to-day operations to informing urban design over longer timescales (Grimmond et al., 2015). Whilst urban climate services may be developed at a range of scales (Grimmond et al., 2020), this presentation looks at a prototype climate service which provides long-term climate change projections at the city-specific scale. The ‘City Pack’ was developed through a process of co-production, in which project development aims to move away from a one-way push of scientific information, to a two-way collaborative process of knowledge construction and sharing (Vincent et al., 2019).

This ‘City Pack’ service was co-developed by the Met Office and Bristol City Council following an assessment of the Council’s climate information needs. The City Pack comprises of three non-technical factsheets which explain how the climate of Bristol has changed and will continue to change into the 21st Century based on the UKCP climate projections. The City Pack’s primary aims are to raise awareness of how a cities climate may change in the future and to inform the development of city resilience whilst also providing a tool to be used by city stakeholders to raise awareness of climate change across the council. The audience for the City Pack therefore includes city officials, city planners and the general public. The Bristol City Pack has since provided an evidence base for the Bristol City Council Climate Change Risk Assessment and informed Bristol’s Climate Strategy. In addition, the City Pack has been used to engage with the council’s wider stakeholders and also as a communication and training tool. As such, whilst the co-production of a climate service may be time and resource intensive, the process may also be rewarded with the production of a highly tailored and user-relevant tool.

Following the success of the prototype ‘City Pack’ service for Bristol City Council, the Met Office are continuing to produce City Packs for additional cities across the UK, and also in China. The project is seeking to ascertain if services which are co-produced with and bespoke to one set of stakeholders, may provide an equally valuable service for other cities and if so, how can we make these services scalable.

How to cite: Fuller, E., Scannell, C., Ramsey, V., Parfitt, R., and Golding, N.: The City Pack - the co-production of an urban climate service providing local summaries of a city's future climate , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6236, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6236, 2021.

EGU21-11216 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Climate services for winter tourism in Romanian mountains

Roxana Bojariu, Liliana Velea, Anisoara Irimescu, Vasile Craciunescu, and Silvia Puiu

WeCTOU (http://wectou.meteoromania.ro/) which delivers climate and environmental information tailored for tourism at 160 locations in Romania is a provider of climate services developed and operated by National Meteorological Administration.  European Commission and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) through the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) have provided the financial support. WeCTOU aims to extend its climate services and in this context, we have taken into account the needs of stakeholders interested in winter tourism in Romanian mountains using observations from national meteorological network together with reanalysis and model products extracted from the Climate Data Store developed at the ECMWF. Stakeholders interested in winter tourism in Romanian mountains span a wide range of categories from central and local administration to representatives of hospitality industry and individuals. In 2019, the Romanian Ministry of Economy, Energy and Business Environment, also responsible of tourism certified 195 ski slopes located in 20 Romanian counties. We use the ensemble distribution of number of days with snow depth larger than 30 cm from future projections covering the period 2021-2040 under climate change scenarios to provide a first guess assessment of future profitability of Romanian ski resorts compared with the reference period 1976-2005. This type of indicator together with climate products related to snow making are important for identifying opportunities for future investments in winter tourism. They are also important in general urban planning for localities which have to change their profile from winter resort to one which serve guests year-round.  Especially for tourists and hospitality industry, we use future projections of indicators relative to present conditions (2021-2040 vs. 1976-2005) such as the ensemble distribution of number of days with snow layers having depths larger than 30 cm during winter holidays (22 Dec- 04 Jan). Also, we have shown how testing all these winter climate services with the interested stakeholders has guided us during the incremental developing stages to shape the final design.   

How to cite: Bojariu, R., Velea, L., Irimescu, A., Craciunescu, V., and Puiu, S.: Climate services for winter tourism in Romanian mountains, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11216, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11216, 2021.

EGU21-14259 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

The 2018–2019 weak El Niño: Predicting the risk of a dengue outbreak in Machala, Ecuador

Desislava Petrova, Xavier Rodó, Rachel Sippy, Joan Ballester, Raul Mejía, Efraín Beltrán-Ayala, Mercy Borbor-Cordova, G. Mauricio Vallejo, Alberto A. Olmedo, Anna Stewart-Ibarra, and Rachel Lowe

Sea surface temperature conditions in the central-eastern tropical Pacific indicated a mild El Niño event in October 2018, which continued throughout the spring of 2019. The global El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) forecast consensus was that these generally weak warm patterns would persist at least until the end of the summer. El Niño and its impact on local climatic conditions in southern coastal Ecuador influence the inter-annual transmission of dengue fever in the region. In this study, we use an ENSO model to issue forecasts of El Niño for the year 2019, which are then used to predict local climate variables, precipitation and minimum temperature, in the city of Machala, Ecuador. All these forecasts are incorporated in a dengue transmission model, specifically developed and tested for this area, to produce out-of-sample predictions of dengue risk. Predictions are issued at the beginning of January 2019 for the whole year, thus providing the longest forecast lead time of 12 months. Preliminary results indicated that the mild El Niño event did not provide the optimum climate conditions for dengue transmission, with the model predicting a very low probability of a dengue outbreak during the typical peak season in Machala in 2019. This is contrary to 2016, when a large El Niño event resulted in excess rainfall and warmer temperatures in the region, and a dengue outbreak occurred 3 months earlier than expected. This event was successfully predicted using a similar prediction framework to the one applied here. With the present study, we continue our  efforts to build and test a climate service tool to issue early warnings of dengue outbreaks in the region.

How to cite: Petrova, D., Rodó, X., Sippy, R., Ballester, J., Mejía, R., Beltrán-Ayala, E., Borbor-Cordova, M., Vallejo, G. M., A. Olmedo, A., Stewart-Ibarra, A., and Lowe, R.: The 2018–2019 weak El Niño: Predicting the risk of a dengue outbreak in Machala, Ecuador, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14259, 2021.

EGU21-9904 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

MED-GOLD Living Lab 2020: the story of an online training event

Alessandro Dell'Aquila, Sandro Calmanti, Luigi Ponti, Marta Bruno Soares, Massimiliano Pasqui, Michael Sanderson, and Federico Caboni

The H2020 MED-GOLD Living Lab ”Turning climate information into value for traditional Mediterranean agri-food systems” was implemented as a solution to deal with the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting travel restrictions. Originally planned as a summer school in Cagliari in Italy, this training event was held online over five weeks between May and June 2020. This work describes the main features of the MED-GOLD Living Lab 2020, including the necessary steps and the strategy adopted to turn the originally planned physical summer school into an online event. 

The MED-GOLD Living Lab 2020 was dedicated to early career scientists and professionals in the areas of climate science, agriculture, economy, social sciences and communication. The Living Lab has been conducted as an on-line event for five weeks, from May 25 to June 25, with weekly interactive webinars by speakers across different disciplines and on-line working groups with multidisciplinary teams, supported by scientists from the MED-GOLD experts as mentors.

Participants have been challenged by real users of climate information to develop prototype climate services for the agri-food sector, building on the knowledge and skills shared during the event.

Early career scientists and professionals with a wide range of individual profiles have been encouraged to apply and join the multidisciplinary teams: climate scientists, agronomists, software developers (R, Python), economists, social scientists, communication and visual communication experts.

The purpose of the Living Lab was to demonstrate to the participants the MED-GOLD concepts and methodologies to develop climate services as well as become familiar with climate data and tools made available through the Copernicus Climate Data Store (CDS).

An online feedback form was distributed to participants in the last day of the living lab. Overall the feedback received was very positive with all respondents stating that they would recommend this living lab to others. The majority of respondents were positive about the overall content, design and delivery of the living lab. 

However, the interactive aspects of the Living Lab could be further improved not only to ensure that the interactions between participants (e.g. to pursue their work group are effective but also in terms of ensuring that the time at which the living lab runs fits with participants’ own commitments. Potential ways of overcoming these could be to e.g. allocate a specific slot during the living lab programme for group work as well as to identify specific dates/time slots to run future living labs together with participants.

The majority enjoyed the opportunity to engage with real-problems and stakeholders, working in multidisciplinary teams and engaging with experts in climate services.

Taking into account the circumstances of the COVID-19 emergency and based on the feedback by the participants, the Living lab was a  successful experiment that could be replicated and further enhanced for the second training event, MED-GOLD Living Lab 2021 planned for late spring 2021.

How to cite: Dell'Aquila, A., Calmanti, S., Ponti, L., Bruno Soares, M., Pasqui, M., Sanderson, M., and Caboni, F.: MED-GOLD Living Lab 2020: the story of an online training event, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9904, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9904, 2021.

EGU21-10924 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Operational Water Service for Copernicus Climate Change Service: development at European scale

Christiana Photiadou, Peter Berg, Denica Bozhinova, Anna Eronn, Fulco Ludwig, Maria del Pozo Garcia del Pozo Garcia, and Ilias Pechlivanidis

The Operational Water Service of C3S (developed by the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI)) aims to help a broad range of water managers with water allocation, flood management, ecological status and industrial water use, to adapt their strategies in order to adapt to climate variability and change. The aim is to speed up the workflow in climate-change adaptation by using seasonal hydrological forecasts and climate-impact indicators. This is done by offering an interactive web application with refined data, guidance and practical showcases to water managers across Europe. Policy makers will find a comprehensive overview for Europe with key messages and consultants can use the service for developing climate impact assessments and adaptation strategies.

The development of the current operational climate service for water management is based on the experience from two previous proof-of-concepts and will also be aligned with the hydrological model system of the Copernicus Emergency Management Service (CEMS).  The service is uses data from the Climate Data Store and the operational hydrological seasonal forecasting system runs entirely in the European Centre for Medium range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) technical environment, although developed by SMHI.

The operational Water Service of C3S will be launched during the spring of 2021, and a series of activities and user interactions will be organised to ensure that the applications developed for the service fulfil the users’ needs. Here, we present the development process of the operational service and key outcomes from co-design interactions and resulting applications. The key issues identified by the user community were: i) clear visualisation and graphical representation of skill in seasonal forecasts and confidence in climate projections, ii) need of detailed documentation and process transparency in hydrological models and production of data, iii) user guidance and tutorials are needed for better understanding of the applications, and iv) workflows and scripts for indicator production in new applications for developers of information systems.

How to cite: Photiadou, C., Berg, P., Bozhinova, D., Eronn, A., Ludwig, F., del Pozo Garcia, M. P. G., and Pechlivanidis, I.: Operational Water Service for Copernicus Climate Change Service: development at European scale, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10924, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10924, 2021.

EGU21-11031 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Designing a Climate Service for Planning Climate Actions in Vulnerable Countries

Frida Gyllensvärd, Christiana Photiadou, Berit Arheimer, Thomas Bosshard, René Capell, Maria Elenius, Ilaria Gallo, Katharina Klehmet, Lorna Little, Isabel Ribeiro, Léonard Santos, and Elin Sjökvist

The next generation of climate services needs not only tailoring to specific user needs but also to provide access to key information in a usable way that satisfies the needs of different users’ profiles. This holds especially for web-based services. Here, we present the outcomes from developing such a new interactive prototype, known as Climate Information (https://climateinformation.org/). The service provides data for robust climate analysis to underpin decision-making when planning measures to compensate for climate impact. Readily available climate indicators will help defining future problems, assess climatic stressors, and analyse current and future risks. This makes a climate case, which is the basis for developing interventions and propose investments. The main goal of the platform is to facilitate the communication on climate information between climate modelling communities and adaptation or mitigation initiatives from vulnerable countries that are applying for funds from the Green Climate Fund (GCF).

A participatory process was ensured during four workshops in four pilot countries, organised by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO), with the active involvement of national and international experts. During this process it was made clear, that there is a strong need for knowledge in climate science in all countries, while in most countries there was also an increasing need of capacity in hydrological modelling and water management.

The active interaction during the workshops was found necessary to facilitate the dialogue between service developers and users. The co-development process is not always institutionalised in many vulnerable countries and the capacity level restricts national entities to only act via international intermediaries. The level of knowledge and capacity in climate and hydrological science in the pilot countries varied significantly, which was an important obstacle when establishing a direct access modality to support different organisations. The diversity of user groups made it difficult to identify a “one-size-fits-all” for the web platform. Instead, a set of interactive tools was developed. Our interactions with the users, which covers a part of a co-development process, facilitated the dialogue between service developers and users. Understanding the users, transparency on potentials and limitations of climate services, and capacity development in climate science and methods were required components in the development of the service.

How to cite: Gyllensvärd, F., Photiadou, C., Arheimer, B., Bosshard, T., Capell, R., Elenius, M., Gallo, I., Klehmet, K., Little, L., Ribeiro, I., Santos, L., and Sjökvist, E.: Designing a Climate Service for Planning Climate Actions in Vulnerable Countries, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11031, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11031, 2021.

EGU21-15537 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Lessons learned from the implementation of the near real-time S2S4E Decision Support Tool

Lluís Palma, Andrea Manrique, Llorenç Lledó, Andria Nicodemou, Pierre-Antoine Bretonnière, Núria Pérez-Zanón, An-chi Ho, and Albert Soret

Under the context of the H2020 S2S4E project, industrial and research partners co-developed a fully-operational Decision Support Tool (DST) providing during 18 months near real-time subseasonal and seasonal  forecasts tailored to the specific needs of the renewable energy sector. The tool aimed to breach the last mile gap between climate information and the end-user by paying attention to the interaction with agents from the sector, already used to work with weather information, and willing to extend their forecasting horizon by incorporating climate predictions into their daily operations.

With this purpose, the tool gathered a heterogeneous dataset of seven different essential climate variables and nine energy indicators, providing for each of them bias-adjusted probabilistic information paired with a reference skill metric. To achieve this, data from state-of-the-art prediction systems and reanalysis needed to be downloaded and post-processed, fulfilling a set of quality requirements that ensure the proper functioning of the operational service. During the design, implementation, and testing phases, a wide range of scientific and technical choices had to be made, making clear the difficulties of transferring scientific research to a user-oriented real-time service. A brief showcase will be presented, exemplifying the different tools, methodologies, and best practices applied to the data workflow, together with a case study performed in Oracle’s cloud infrastructure. We expect that by making a clear description of the process and the problems encountered, we will provide a valuable experience for both, upcoming attempts of similar implementations, and the organizations providing data from climate models and reanalysis.

How to cite: Palma, L., Manrique, A., Lledó, L., Nicodemou, A., Bretonnière, P.-A., Pérez-Zanón, N., Ho, A., and Soret, A.: Lessons learned from the implementation of the near real-time S2S4E Decision Support Tool, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15537, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15537, 2021.

EGU21-12819 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Addressing the impacts of sand and dust storms in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe for air quality, aviation and solar energy: the DustClim approach to climate services

Athanasios Votsis, Sara Basart, Francesca Barnaba, Enza Di Tomaso, Anders Lindfors, Lucia Mona, Michalis Mytilinaios, Paola Formenti, Tuukka Rautio, Yijun Wang, Ernest Werner, and Carlos Pérez García-Pando

Sand and Dust Storms (SDS) are extreme meteorological phenomena associated with high amounts of atmospheric mineral dust. SDS are an essential element of the Earth’s natural biogeochemical cycles but are also partly caused by human factors including anthropogenic climate change and unsustainable land and water management; in turn, SDS contribute to climate change and air pollution. SDS have become a serious global concern in recent decades due to their significant impacts on the environment, health, agriculture, livelihoods, and the economy. The impacts are felt throughout the developed and developing world and their mitigation is aligned with several of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. There has been an ever-increasing need for accurate information and predictions on SDS—particularly over desert regions such as the Sahara and in the Middle East—to support early warning systems as well as preparedness and mitigation plans, in addition to growing interest from diverse stakeholders and policymakers in the solar energy, health, environment and aviation sectors. 

The ongoing ERA4CS ‘Dust Storms Assessment for the development of user-oriented Climate services in Northern Africa, the Middle East and Europe’ (DustClim) project is enhancing our knowledge of the ways SDS affect society by producing and delivering an advanced dust regional model reanalysis for N. Africa, the Middle East and Europe, based on the MONARCH chemical weather prediction system (Pérez et al. 2011; Di Tomaso et al. 2017) and satellite retrievals over dust source regions, and by developing dust-related services tailored to strategic planning, operations, and policy-making in the air quality, aviation, and solar energy sectors.  

In this contribution, we will present how the resulting dust reanalysis is used as the basis to understand the mid-to-long-term impacts and implications of operating (and regulating) in risky sand and dust environments, namely: (1) the mineral dust component of air quality and its health and regulatory implications; (2) aircraft and airport operations, maintenance and planning; (3) strategic investment and operations optimization in solar energy. We will present our development approach that integrates scientific, industrial and regulatory knowledge, addressing ‘objective threats’ in dialogue with industry partners and public stakeholders (Votsis et al. 2020). Finally, we present an overview of the developed portfolio of SDS climate services for the three aforementioned sectors.

Acknowledgment

The authors acknowledge DustClim project, part of ERA4CS, an ERA-NET initiated by JPI Climate, and funded by FORMAS (SE), DLR (DE), BMWFW (AT), IFD (DK), MINECO (ES), ANR (FR) with co-funding by the European Union (435690462); PRACE (eDUST, eFRAGMENT1, eFRAGMENT2); RES (AECT-2020-3-0013) for awarding access to MareNostrum at BSC and for technical support.

References

Di Tomaso, E. et al. (2017): Assimilation of MODIS Dark Target and Deep Blue observations in the dust aerosol component of NMMB-MONARCH version 1.0, Geosci. Model Dev., 10, 1107-1129, doi:10.5194/gmd-10-1107-2017.

Pérez, C. et al. (2011): An online mineral dust aerosol model for meso to global scales: Model description, annual simulations and evaluation, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 11, 13001-13027, doi: 10.5194/acp-11-13001-2011.

Votsis, A. et al. (2020): Operational risks of sand and dust storms in aviation and solar energy: the DustClim approach, FMI's Climate Bulletin: Research Letters 1/2020, doi: 10.35614/ISSN-2341-6408-IK-2020-02-RL.

How to cite: Votsis, A., Basart, S., Barnaba, F., Di Tomaso, E., Lindfors, A., Mona, L., Mytilinaios, M., Formenti, P., Rautio, T., Wang, Y., Werner, E., and Pérez García-Pando, C.: Addressing the impacts of sand and dust storms in North Africa, the Middle East and Europe for air quality, aviation and solar energy: the DustClim approach to climate services, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12819, 2021.

EGU21-12926 | vPICO presentations | CL2.1

Co-developing a data and knowledge portal to support stakeholder risk assessments with uncertain, global, multi-model based information on hydrological hazards of climate change

Fabian Kneier, Denise Cáceres, Stephan Dietrich, Dirk Schwanenberg, Harald Köthe, and Petra Döll

Successful adaptation to climate change worldwide will require many local climate change risk assessments. However, appropriate and tailored climate services and information tools are lacking, particularly in developing countries. Co-produced, user-driven climate services are a recognized means for effective generation and provisioning of relevant climate information and support the utilization by decision-makers, enabling them to account for climate change in their risk portfolios. In the CO-MICC project (ERA4CS), a data and knowledge portal is co-developed with stakeholders based on global-scale multi-model simulations of hydrological variables. In a participatory manner, we focussed on (1) eliciting the relevant hydrological hazard indicators, (2) representing their uncertainty quantitatively in a way that is both scientifically correct and utilizable to the diverse users of the hazard information, and (3) creating guidance on how to integrate the uncertain global information into regional-scale assessments of water-related climate change risk and adaptation assessments. Adapting the tandem framework of the Swedish Environmental Institute (SEI), participatory stakeholder dialogues including seven workshops with stakeholders from focus regions in Europe and Northern Africa, and finally with globally-acting companies serve to integrate the various experiences, needs and expectations of various regions and users. Participants included local researchers, experts from meteorological services and decision-makers from regional and national hydrological agencies. Together, we co-produced relevant model output variables and appropriate end-user products encompassing static and dynamically generated information in a web portal. The global-scale information products include interactive maps, diagrams, time series graphs, and suitably co-developed statistics, with appropriate visualization of uncertainty. In complement, the knowledge tool provides transparent meta-information, tutorials and handbook guidelines to utilize the provided information in models of local participatory risk assessments. While CO-MICC enables access to this information to a broad range of stakeholders from around the world (policy makers, NGOs, the private sector, the research community, the public in general) for their region of interest, it additionally sheds light on the optimal design and methods of co-development processes.

How to cite: Kneier, F., Cáceres, D., Dietrich, S., Schwanenberg, D., Köthe, H., and Döll, P.: Co-developing a data and knowledge portal to support stakeholder risk assessments with uncertain, global, multi-model based information on hydrological hazards of climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12926, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12926, 2021.

CL2.2 – Urban climate, urban biometeorology, and science tools for cities

EGU21-15389 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2 | Highlight

WMO Research Demonstration Project “Paris 2024 Olympic Games“ : An international initiative towards 100m-resolution meteorological and air quality forecasting in urban areas 

Valéry Masson, Estelle de Coning, Alexander Baklanov, Jorge Amorim, Clotilde Augros, Stéphane Bélair, Andreas Christen, Gilles Foret, Charmaine Franklin, Jorge Gonzalez-Cruz, Sue Grimmond, Martial Haeffelin, Simone Kotthaus, Humphrey Lean, Aude Lemonsu, Sylvie Leroyer, Peter Li, Ariane Middel, Amandine Rosso, and Scott Swerdlin

The WMO World Weather Research Programme (WWRP) “promotes international and interdisciplinary research for more accurate and reliable forecasts from minutes to seasons, expanding the frontiers of weather science to enhance society’s resilience to high-impact weather and the value of weather information for users. In the 2016-2023 WWRP implementation plan, activities focus on 4 challenges: High-Impact Weather, Water, Urbanization, Evolving technologies. Furthermore, the WMO Global Atmosphere Watch Urban Research Meteorology and Environment (GURME) focus on the development of models and associated research activities to enhance the capabilities in providing urban-environmental forecasting and air quality services, illustrating the linkages between meteorology and air quality (https://public.wmo.int/en/programmes).

This talk presents an international Research Demonstration Project (RDP), that will focus on international research on scientific urban issues addressed by both WWRP and GURME. The strategic objective of this RDP is to focus on the Olympic Games of Paris in 2024 in order to advance research on the theme of the “future Meteorological Forecasting systems at 100m (or finer) resolution for urban areas”. Such systems would prefigure the numerical weather prediction at the horizon 2030. The focus will be on themes related to extreme weather events in summer which both are influenced by and impacts urbanization: thunderstorms and strong Urban Heat Islands, and their consequences.

There are 5 scientific questions that will be addressed during this Paris RDP:

  • Nowcasting & Numerical Weather Prediction in cities at order 100m resolution
  • High resolution thunderstorm nowcasting (probabilistic and deterministic) in the urban environment,  Urban heat islands, cool areas and air quality
  • Nowcasting and forecast in coastal cities (for the Marseilles site)
  • How to improve and better use observational networks in urban areas, including (big) non-conventional data
  • Conception and Communication of tailored weather, climate, environmental information at infra-urban resolution.

Several High-Impact weather case studies were selected. Storm cases (starting with one the 10th July 2017) will allow to evaluate the role of the urban area on their enhancement. Extreme Heat wave aggravated by a strong Urban Heat Island are also studied (July 2019). Open urban data describing the agglomerations at very high resolution are provided. New innovative methods to produce maps of urban form characteristics (e.g. from street images) and meteorological data (from personal meteorological stations) will be explored.

This talk will describe these scientific questions, as well as the common methodology approach that is being discussed within the partners. A focus will be the international experimental campaign that will take place in 2022 over the Paris agglomeration, with an Intensive Observation Period in the summer 2022. Interactions between urban surface and the atmospheric boundary layer, the interactions between air quality and aerosols between city and biogenic plumes, and the local effect of urban trees on micro-climate and chemistry are some of the axes of the campaign. It will provide additional meteorological and air quality observations, to both help to improve the nowcasting and NWP systems at urban scale, and aim to define the required additional instrumentation that should be deployed during the Olympics games themselves.

How to cite: Masson, V., de Coning, E., Baklanov, A., Amorim, J., Augros, C., Bélair, S., Christen, A., Foret, G., Franklin, C., Gonzalez-Cruz, J., Grimmond, S., Haeffelin, M., Kotthaus, S., Lean, H., Lemonsu, A., Leroyer, S., Li, P., Middel, A., Rosso, A., and Swerdlin, S.: WMO Research Demonstration Project “Paris 2024 Olympic Games“ : An international initiative towards 100m-resolution meteorological and air quality forecasting in urban areas , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15389, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15389, 2021.

EGU21-4575 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Large-Eddy Simulation for the Roughness Sublayers over Real Urban Surfaces 

Lan Yao and Chun-Ho Liu

ABSTRACT:

    With the continuous spreading of global pandemic, environmental issues have aroused worldwide unprecedented attention. Airflow plays a crucial role in aerosol motions and pollutants removal in dense cities. Large-eddy simulation (LES) is conducted for a typical metropolitan, Hong Kong, to investigate the dynamics in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) over real urban surfaces. Full-scale building models (average building height hm = 36 m) from Tsim Sha Tsui to Sham Shui Po, Kowloon Peninsula, are digitalized. Southerly wind with speed U (= 10 m sec-1) in neutral stratification is prescribed at the domain inlet. The turbulence statistics extracted from three subdomains in Mong Kok neighborhood, each with size 800 m (streamwise) × 100 m (spanwise) × 500 m (vertical), are analyzed. Linear regression of the wind profile with the logarithmic law of the wall (log-law) show that the interface between inertial sublayer (ISL) and roughness sublayer (RSL) is in the range of 2.5hm to 4.5hm. In the RSL, the streamwise and vertical velocities are positively (Su > 0) and negatively (Sw < 0) skewed, respectively. Their kurtosis Ku and Kw is less than 3. Conditional sampling of vertical momentum, flux u’’w’’ showed that ejection Q2 occurs more frequently than does sweep Q4. On the contrary, the contribution of Q4 exceeds that of Q2. These characteristics switch to the other way round in the ISL. Furthermore, the difference between Q4 and Q2, either in terms of occurrence or contribution, shows a local maximum around 50% of the total momentum flux, suggesting the major energy-carrying scales. Coherent structures depict elongated, (massive,) accelerating (decelerating) and descending (ascending) RSL (ISL) flows. Hence, the fresh (aged) air entrainment (detrainment) are signified by fast and extreme (slow and frequent) flows. These distinct features of RSL flows over real urban morphology provide an inspiration to improve the ground-level air quality by proper urban planning.

KEYWORDS: Large-eddy simulation (LES), real urban morphology, turbulent boundary layer (TBL), conditional sampling, hole filtering

 

 

How to cite: Yao, L. and Liu, C.-H.: Large-Eddy Simulation for the Roughness Sublayers over Real Urban Surfaces , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4575, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4575, 2021.

EGU21-2194 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Comparison of urban climate measurements in Berlin and LES model output for a special observation period

Ines langer, Alexander Pasternack, Uwe Ulbrich, and Henning Rust

Surface (2 m) temperature and specific humidity data are measured at 5-minute intervals in a network comprising 33 stations distributed across the city of Berlin, Germany. These data are utilized in order to validate a LES (large eddy simulation) model designed to assess the local climate at a very high resolution of 10 m to 1 m. This model, was developed at the ​Institute of Meteorology and Climatology (IMUK) of the Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany, and is developed into an application tool for city planners within the funding programme "[UC²] - Urban Climate under Change", of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).

The evaluation distinguishes between the different Local climate zones (LCZ) in the city, which are defined following the concept of Stewart & Oke (2012). For Berlin, the following LCZ have been identified: 2 (compact midrise), 4 (open high-rise), 6 (open low-rise), 8 (large low-rise), A (dense trees), B (scattered trees), D (low Plants), G (water).

We analyzed one cold winter day during an intensive observation period from 06 UTC on 17th January to 06 UTC on 18th January, 2017. The minimum and maximum recorded temperatures were -8.1 °C and +2 °C, respectively, the sun shine duration was 6.5 hours. Daily and hourly mean absolute error, mean square error and root mean square error confirm that the deviation between measurements and the PALM-4U model differs between the LCZ for Berlin, with particularly large negative deviations of up to 5 K in forest areas, as they are not yet well represented in the model. Smallest deviations are found for the industrial zone. In all cases, the observed amplitude of the diurnal cycle is underestimated. The role of the driving model for the deviations found is addressed.

Stewart, I.D., Oke, T.R. (2012) Local climate zones for urban temperature studies. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 93 1879-1900. DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-11-00019.1.

 

How to cite: langer, I., Pasternack, A., Ulbrich, U., and Rust, H.: Comparison of urban climate measurements in Berlin and LES model output for a special observation period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2194, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2194, 2021.

EGU21-1715 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

The urban fingerprint in the sea-breeze hodograph reveled by high resolution WRF simulations

David Avisar, Ran Pelta, Alexandra Chudnovsky, and Dorita Rostkier-Edelstein

We implement and verify for the first time four Weather Research and Forecasting model urban configurations, focused on the coastal metropolitan area of Tel-Aviv (MTA) using updated land use and urban morphological maps. We analyze the mesoscale summertime flow and the urban canopy (UC) role in the occurrence of different hodograph dynamics observed within MTA at night. These events may be significant in air quality research. The four configurations – bulk (MM), single-layer (SLUCM), multi-layer (BEP), and BEP coupled with the building energy model (BEPBEM) – reproduce the observed diurnal temperature and wind cycles, with similar 10m wind direction bias and RMSE (15° and ~30°, respectively), with preference for MM and SLUCM at night. However, the SLUCM shows the lowest skill for the 10m wind speed (WS) (bias and RMSE 1ms-1), and the BEP shows the largest underestimation of the 2m temperature, ~-2.5°C. In the SLUCM, the WS increases over an UC and with increasing building heights. The simulations show that at night, a convergence line (CL) builds up with the urban heat island, downstream of the NW flow. West of the CL, the wind continues flowing from the sea, and rotates anti-clockwise to form a non-elliptical sea-breeze hodograph. Removing MTA UC restores an elliptical hodograph. East of the CL, the UC supports an elliptical hodograph with a clockwise rotation through the NE sector, previously reported as dynamically unstable. We expect such wind hodograph dynamics within similar coastal metropolitan areas.

How to cite: Avisar, D., Pelta, R., Chudnovsky, A., and Rostkier-Edelstein, D.: The urban fingerprint in the sea-breeze hodograph reveled by high resolution WRF simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1715, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1715, 2021.

EGU21-3056 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

The Impact of Urban Land Use On the Springtime Frontal Precipitation Event in Ankara: A Case Study of 5 May 2014

Berkay Dönmez, Kutay Dönmez, Deniz Diren-Üstün, and Yurdanur Ünal

Studies concerning the effects of urbanization on heavy precipitation events mostly focused on the summertime convective precipitation events. In these studies, the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect was prominent over the urbanized region before the event, changing the spatial and temporal distribution of the precipitation. We aim to reveal the impact of urbanization over Ankara on the springtime frontal precipitation event of 5 May 2014, when the ground heating and UHI effects are not as strong as those in the summertime. We performed two different simulations based on the land-use scenarios with urban (URBAN) and without urban areas (NOURBAN) over Ankara, integrating the CORINE Land Use dataset into the Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF v3.8) and replacing the urban areas with the dominant land use category over the region. Four sub-regions with the identical area coverages corresponding to the upwind, central, and downwind parts of the city center are defined to have a lucid spatial and temporal representation of the event. The two simulation results agreed reasonably with the observations. In the simulation (URBAN) with the urban land use included, the spatial average of the daily rainfall amounts over the predefined sub-regions slightly decreased, especially the sub-regions to the upwind and downwind of the highly urbanized area. However, the difference in precipitation amount in the vicinity of the urbanized area between the two different simulations is not of significance in comparison to what was observed in other summertime precipitation studies. On the other hand, the UHI effect might be crucial in determining the impact of urban land use on the distribution and magnitude of the heavy springtime rainfall. To support this idea, we performed a similar analysis for a summertime convective precipitation event over Ankara and compared the results.

How to cite: Dönmez, B., Dönmez, K., Diren-Üstün, D., and Ünal, Y.: The Impact of Urban Land Use On the Springtime Frontal Precipitation Event in Ankara: A Case Study of 5 May 2014, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3056, 2021.

EGU21-1121 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Sensitivity study of PBL schemes and urban morphology parameters using the WRF-BEP+BEM model over a Mediterranean coastal city

Ricard Segura, Joan Gilabert, Sergi Ventura, Alba Badia, Alberto Martilli, and Gara Villalba

Cities house over 50% of the population, despite covering only 2% of the earth’s surface area. With the increased urbanization, the impact of climate change in urban areas is seen as a major problem. In the case of the Mediterranean region, the increase in frequency, intensity and duration of extreme heat wave events supposes a significant risk for the population. These factors have raised the focus on understanding and modelling the impact of extreme heat events on cities and to improve the simulation of these events to investigate possible heat adaptation/mitigation measures to ameliorate urban temperatures. This study investigates the sensitivity of high-resolution mesoscale simulations of the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona (AMB) to different urban physical parametrizations for a heat wave event in order to improve urban atmospheric modelling of Mediterranean coastal cities and to reduce uncertainties. The simulations are conducted using the WRF model coupled to the Building Effect Parameterization and the Building Energy Model (BEP+BEM) at 1 km resolution. The physical aspects in WRF that are analysed are: 1) the refinement of urban morphological parameters; and 2) planetary boundary layer (PBL) scheme. The results show that the inclusion of more specific urban morphology does not suppose a better performance of the WRF simulation in comparison to the use of 11 urban land-use classes with averaged urban morphological parameters, although it reduces systematic errors on night-time near-surface temperatures, especially in urban green areas. The comparison between PBL schemes shows that this aspect has a significative influence in the simulation of potential temperature inside the PBL and on near-surface temperature and wind. Moreover, the impact of urbanization on the urban boundary layer (UBL) is determined for the AMB simulating a scenario with no urbanization inside the AMB (all urban areas are changed to croplands). Results show that urbanization not only changes near-surface temperatures, but it has a considerable reducing impact on sea and land-breezes, and an intensifying effect on the PBL height.

How to cite: Segura, R., Gilabert, J., Ventura, S., Badia, A., Martilli, A., and Villalba, G.: Sensitivity study of PBL schemes and urban morphology parameters using the WRF-BEP+BEM model over a Mediterranean coastal city, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1121, 2021.

EGU21-2331 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urbanisation-induced climate warming in Great Britain

Richard Bassett, Paul Young, Gordon Blair, Xiaoming Cai, and Lee Chapman

In Great Britain (GB) 5.8% of the total land area is considered urban, yet the wider impact of Urban Heat Islands (UHIs) beyond city scales has not been fully explored. Through scaling data from a high-resolution urban monitoring network we estimate the current (2014) spatial daily-mean urban warming across GB to be 0.04°C [0.02 °C – 0.06°C]. Despite this GB-wide contribution appearing small (94% of the land cover is still rural), half of GB's population currently live in areas with average daily-mean UHIs of 0.4°C. GB is also experiencing rapid urbanisation, with urban land cover expanding from 4.3 to 5.8% between 1975 and 2014. Purely due to urbanisation in this period, we estimate GB as a whole is warming at a rate that is both equivalent and in addition to ~3% of the background surface-level climate change (i.e. natural and greenhouse gas induced). In areas with the greatest urban expansion, we find UHI-induced warming rates are up to three times this average. Although our study only applies to GB, the simplicity of our method means that it can be equally applied to other countries. Urbanisation is undeniably a global phenomenon with urban expansion in many countries far exceeding that found in GB.

How to cite: Bassett, R., Young, P., Blair, G., Cai, X., and Chapman, L.: Urbanisation-induced climate warming in Great Britain, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2331, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2331, 2021.

EGU21-1483 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Towards a new methodology to determine nighttime Urban Heat Island

Blanca Arellano and Josep Roca

The study of urban heat island (UHI) is of great importance in the context of climate change (CC). The literature on urban climate has highlighted the singular importance of night UHI phenomenon. It is during the night that the effects of UHI become most evident due to the low cooling capacity of urban construction materials and it is during nighttime that the accumulated heat and high temperatures can generate greater risks to health, leading to aggravate the negative impacts on people's health and comfort, especially in extreme events such as heat waves.

Traditional methods for obtaining nocturnal UHI have been directed either to extrapolation of data from weather stations. The lack of weather stations in urban landscapes makes it extremely difficult to obtain data to extrapolate and propose models at a detailed resolution scale.

The low spatial resolution of the air temperature information contrasts with the higher resolution of the thermal data of the land covers supplied by the satellite sensors. There is a high consensus that the temperature of the earth's surface (LST) plays a fundamental role in the generation of UHI, representing a determinant of surface radiation and energy exchange, as well as the control of the heat distribution between surface and atmosphere. However, the study of the nocturnal LST is still poorly developed due to structural problems related to the availability of detailed data on the LST at night. Most of the satellite sensors (Landsat, Aster, ...) allow to obtain daytime thermal images, but in a much more limited way nighttime thermal data. Only MODIS or Sentinel 3 provide abundant thermal night images, but the low resolution of these images (1 km / pixel) does not allow the construction of detailed models of the nocturnal UHI. For these reasons, estimating the nocturnal UHI remains a pending challenge.

This paper aims to develop a new methodology to determine nighttime LST using data from Landsat thermal bands and contrasting Landsat's very limited nighttime images with daytime ones. The contrast between the daytime and nighttime LST allows the construction of “cooling” models of the LST based on geographic characteristics and urban-spatial parameters, which could be extrapolated to different periods of time (during the same season).

However, the estimation of the LST from nighttime Landsat thermal bands is not a trivial question. The most used methodology to determine daytime LST is based on estimating the emissivity of the land from its degree of vegetation (NDVI threshold). But this method shows significant limitations at night. The NDVI overvalues vegetation when considering the canopy of trees. This overestimation may be correct during the day, when the shade of the trees limits the radiation incident on the ground. But it is critical at night.

For this reason, this paper seeks to develop a new methodology to estimate the degree of vegetation and soil moisture, and, based on it, determine the emissivity and, consequently, the nocturnal LST.

The case study is the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona (636 km2, 3.3 million inhabitants).

How to cite: Arellano, B. and Roca, J.: Towards a new methodology to determine nighttime Urban Heat Island, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1483, 2021.

EGU21-12228 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

A coastal urban adaptation model with time-discounting, optimizing and satisficing decision making

Dmitry Kovalevsky and Jürgen Scheffran

We develop a discrete-time coastal urban adaptation model where the ‘present’ and ‘future’ time periods are distinguished. In the model, the city anticipates sea level rise and related coastal hazards with adverse impacts on urban economy in the future period. However, the magnitude of future sea level rise and induced climate damages are known with uncertainty. The urban planning agent has to make at present a decision on how much to invest in climate adaptation (in the form of construction of coastal protection). We explore three complementary models of decision making. They include the intertemporal maximization of time-discounted expected utility of consumption and two versions of the VIABLE modelling framework with an optimizing and a satisficing urban planning agent, respectively. It is shown that in certain model setups, investment decisions depend discontinuously on the value of key model parameters. In particular, when these parameters are varied, the urban planner can discontinuously switch from the ‘business-as-usual’ (BaU) strategy, when no adaptation investment is taken, to a proactive adaptation.

How to cite: Kovalevsky, D. and Scheffran, J.: A coastal urban adaptation model with time-discounting, optimizing and satisficing decision making, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12228, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12228, 2021.

In recent years, the use of remote sensed NDVI has become recurrent in urban studies regarding the adaptation of cities to climate change. However, due to the physical diversity within cities and the different resolution offered by the sensors, the territorial interpretation of what the NDVI values really mean becomes difficult. Where the larger the size of the cells of the image, the greater the number of elements of the built environment within it, and the more complex the interpretation becomes.

In this work, the relationship between the NDVI of three sensors with different cell resolution for the same location and date is studied. In particular, the city of Granollers in the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona is analyzed. First, the NDVI images were obtained from Landsat-8 with 30m resolution, Sentinel-2 with 10m and from the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Food of Catalonia (DARP) with 0.125m resolution. Then, the comparison was performed with a sample of five different typologies of the territory: dense urban core, suburban, industrial, area of highway and rural.

As first results, a supervised classification of the DARP image allowed the definition of 0.30 as the precise minimum value of NDVI that indicates the actual presence of vegetation. On the other hand, the comparison indicates that, in the urban context, the larger the cell size, the presence of vegetation quality is overestimated, where the higher percentage of cells is concentrated in higher NDVI values than in those with lower resolution. However, this behavior is not appreciated in rural areas, where higher percentages of cells of different resolutions were concentrated in the same NDVI ranges.

In such a way, it is corroborated that it is in the urban context where this indicator has a greater difficulty of territorial interpretation. Statements that are analyzed in greater depth in this study, where its implications in the use of NDVI in urban studies for the adaptation of cities to climate change are discussed.

How to cite: García-Haro, A. and Roca, J.: Comparative analysis of three NDVI resolutions in different urban typologies. The case of Granollers in the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14785, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14785, 2021.

EGU21-9372 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Large Scale Exploitation of Satellite Data for the Assessment of Urban Surface Temperatures

Zina Mitraka and Nektarios Chrysoulakis

The rate at which global climate change is happening is arguably the most pressing environmental challenge of the century and it affects our cities. Temperature is one of the most important parameters in climate monitoring and Earth Observation (EO) systems and the advances in remote sensing science increase the opportunities for monitoring the surface temperature from space. The EO4UTEMP project examines the exploitation of EO data for monitoring the urban surface temperature (UST). Large variations in surface temperatures can be observed within a couple of hours, particularly when referring to urban surfaces. The geometric, radiative, thermal, and aerodynamic properties of the urban surface are unique and exert particularly strong control on the surface temperature. EO satellites provide excellent means for mapping the land surface temperature, but the particular properties of the urban surface and the unique urban geometry in combination with the trade-off between temporal and spatial resolution of the current satellite missions impose the development of new sophisticated surface temperature retrieval methods particularly designed for urban areas. EO4TEMP develops a novel UST algorithm exploiting multi-temporal, multi-sensor, multi-resolution EO data, to be validated with in-situ measurements in urban sites and to be applied to Sentinel-3 and Sentinel-2 data. Therefore, EO4UTEMP will provide an advanced methodology for deriving frequent UST estimations at local scale (100 m), capable of resolving the diurnal variation of UST and contribute to the study of the urban energy balance.

How to cite: Mitraka, Z. and Chrysoulakis, N.: Large Scale Exploitation of Satellite Data for the Assessment of Urban Surface Temperatures, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9372, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9372, 2021.

EGU21-10521 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Impact of Urban Land Cover Types on Surface Temperature

Marzie Naserikia, Melissa Hart, and Negin Nazarian

The conversion of natural land to built-up surfaces has been widely documented as the main determinant of warming across urban areas. However, uncertainties remain regarding which primary land cover variables control urban heat in different climatic conditions at a global scale. While there is a very little understanding of how the cooling effects of vegetation cover vary over different cities, there is a deep knowledge gap in realizing how other land covers (such as soil, water, and built-up areas) are associated with urban warming and how this relationship is varied in different background climates. Accordingly, using a high spatial resolution dataset, a global synthetic investigation is needed to find the underlying factors influencing intra-urban temperature variability in various climates. To address this shortcoming, this study focuses on exploring the relationship between land surface temperature and land cover in different cities (using Landsat 8 imagery) and aims to investigate the effects of these land cover types on thermal environments in different climatic backgrounds. Preliminary analysis shows that different land cover types have different roles in different climate classes due to their various surface characteristics and in particular, the performance of green spaces to reduce LST is highly dependent on its background climate. For example, the efficiency of vegetation cover to reduce urban surface warming in temperate and tropical climates is more than that in arid and semi-arid areas. In this climate class, since baren soil is the main contributor to the intensity of LST, increasing the area of a green space presents an effective method to mitigate the adverse effects of local warming. Our findings provide helpful information for future urban climate-sensitive planning oriented at mitigating local climate warming in cities.

How to cite: Naserikia, M., Hart, M., and Nazarian, N.: Impact of Urban Land Cover Types on Surface Temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10521, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10521, 2021.

EGU21-2184 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Form-based recommendations for pedestrian level thermal comfort in compact neighbourhoods – A case study in Glasgow

Nusrath Maharoof, Rohinton Emmanuel, and Craig Thomson

In light of climate change as well as challenges associated with urban liveability, many cities are now focusing on outdoor spaces as an extension of living spaces.  Aligned with this, the Glasgow city development plan aims to achieve a healthy and high-quality compact city that supports sustainable development in times of climate change.  However, overheating associated with climate change as well as urban heat island requires planners to identify the thermal comfort consequences of decisions to enhance outdoor living in urban neighbourhoods. Yet, the lack of performance data often hinders planners’ ability to propose guidelines for the health and wellbeing of city dwellers.  In particular, the relationship between compact urban form and heat stress needs to explored.

In this paper, we explore the thermal performance of neighbourhoods based on vertical and horizontal density parameters that are amenable with planning control. We develop graphic tools for the analysis of neighbourhood thermal performance at street level.  We demonstrate mechanisms to integrate the tool into the planning process of City Centre development in Glasgow by way of thermal comfort guidelines to enhance the liveability of an existing streetscape as well as proposed new developments within pre-determined neighbourhood forms.

How to cite: Maharoof, N., Emmanuel, R., and Thomson, C.: Form-based recommendations for pedestrian level thermal comfort in compact neighbourhoods – A case study in Glasgow, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2184, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2184, 2021.

Many cities are facing urban overheating issues where the reduction of urban ventilation is one of the key drivers. To address the urban overheating problems, this study concentrates on the analysis of local-scale urban ventilation and its impacts of urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort, in order to support wind-sensitive urban planning and design. To achieve this, this study develops a framework for analysing local ventilation, urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort with the consideration of local morphological characteristics, external meteorological conditions, local ventilation performance, urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort. In particular, the consideration of local morphological characteristics is supported by the development of precinct morphology classification scheme based on three-component protocol of building height, street structure and compactness. Based on the three-component protocol, 20 types of the local ventilation zones were identified in the context of Greater Sydney, Australia.

Field measurement was conducted in three typical local ventilation zones, including open low-rise gridiron, open midrise gridiron and compact high-rise gridiron among the 20, to examine the local ventilation performance, urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort in summer 2019. The results indicate that the open midrise gridiron precinct underwent the best precinct ventilation performance, followed by the low-rise gridiron precinct and then the compact high-rise gridiron precinct. The local ventilation created by the sea breeze can help alleviate urban heat islands in the open low-rise gridiron and compact high-rise gridiron precincts with every 0.1 increase in relative wind velocity ratio leading to a 0.09-0.12 °C reduction in UHI intensity. However, in the open midrise gridiron precinct, the local ventilation created by the sea breeze made no difference for urban heat islands. However, the precinct ventilation of the open midrise gridiron precinct still partially exhibited UHI alleviation potential with every 0.1 increase in relative wind velocity ratio leading to a 0.06-0.1 °C reduction in UHI intensity depending on the approaching wind temperature and shading conditions.

Only the precinct ventilation of the open low-rise gridiron precinct leads to outdoor thermal comfort improvement with every 0.1 increase in relative wind velocity ratio leading to 0.29 °C and 0.50 °C physiological equivalent temperature reductions under sea breeze and varying wind conditions, respectively. The results also indicate that within ‘gridiron’ precincts, street orientation is not critical to precinct ventilation performance and its impact on urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort. Under wind conditions, trees do not always alleviate urban heat islands and improve outdoor thermal comfort as trees can block sea breeze penetration and inhibit wind cooling potential. These key findings will serve to inform urban heat island mitigation strategies and future planning and design decisions in the built environment.

How to cite: He, B.-J.: Local ventilation and its impacts on urban heat islands and outdoor thermal comfort, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13622, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13622, 2021.

EGU21-2419 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Quality Control and Bias Correction of Citizen Science Wind Observations

Jieyu Chen, Kirien Whan, and Kate Saunders

Wind observations collected at citizen science wind stations (CWS) could be an invaluable resource in climate and meteorology studies, yet these observations are underutilised because scientists do not have confidence in their quality. While a few studies have considered the quality of CWS wind speed observations, none have addressed the biases, likely caused by instrumentation biases and station placement errors. These systematic biases introduce spatial inconsistencies that prevent comparison of these stations spatially and limit the possible usage of the data. In this paper, we address these issues by improving and developing new methods for identifying suspect observations and calibrating systematic biases in the wind speed observations collected at CWS.

Our complete quality control system consists of four steps: (1) performing within-station quality controls to check the plausible range and the temporal consistency of observations; (2) correcting the bias, mainly caused by low sensor heights, using empirical quantile mapping; (3) implementing between-station quality control that compares observations from neighbouring stations to identify spatially inconsistent observations; (4) providing estimates of the true wind when CWS falsely report zero wind speeds, as a complement to bias correction.

We apply these methods to CWS from the Weather Observation Website (WOW) in the Netherlands, comparing the citizen science data with official data, and statistically assessing the improvements in data quality after each step. The results demonstrate that the citizen science wind data are comparable with official data after quality control checks and bias corrections. Our quality assessment methods therefore give confidence to CWS, converting their observations into a usable data product and an invaluable resource for applications in need of additional wind observations.

How to cite: Chen, J., Whan, K., and Saunders, K.: Quality Control and Bias Correction of Citizen Science Wind Observations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2419, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2419, 2021.

EGU21-8473 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

The first Coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdown (March-May 2020): temporary drop in anthropogenic emissions reveals the dynamic of CO2 fluxes and concentrations in urban areas

Antonio Randazzo, Stefania Venturi, Franco Tassi, Antonella Buccianti, Beniamino Gioli, Giovanni Gualtieri, Francesco Capecchiacci, Jacopo Cabassi, Lorenzo Brilli, Federico Carotenuto, Alessandro Zaldei, and Orlando Vaselli

The worldwide restrictions imposed to contain the spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19) disease markedly affected social and economic systems, undeniably disrupting people’s habits. At the same time, the reduction of industrial and commercial activities and limitation of movements led to significant decline in most greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, improving urban air quality. Nevertheless, worldwide CO2 emission reduction was not accompanied by detectable CO2 concentration decreasing, that continued to grow at a global scale.                 

The relationship between emission rate and urban atmospheric GHG concentrations represents a fundamental tool for monitoring activities aimed at indicating strategies to reduce and buffer GHG concentrations in the urban atmosphere. Generally, the occurrence of many different GHG sources (e.g. industry activities, domestic heating) in urban areas does not allow to evaluate the efficiency of short-term interventions on a specific source of contamination to mitigate urban air pollution (i.e. traffic restriction or reduction of energy use). The COVID-19 lockdown has provided a unique opportunity to empirically evaluate the effect on CO2 urban plume of both total and sector-specific anthropogenic emission cutting related to traffic dramatic decrease, followed by the stop of the domestic heating and the progressive resumption of urban normal functions at the end of the lockdown period.

In Italy, the first country in Europe to adopt stringent restrictions, the lockdown (mainly consisting of movement limitation of all people and restrictions involving commercial and industrial sectors) was established from March 9, 2020, during and until the end of the heating season, to May 4, 2020, when vehicular traffic and economic activity progressively resumed. In this study, real-time data of concentration and carbon isotopic composition of CO2 at ground level (2 m height) and of eddy covariance (EC) CO2 flux at ~33 m above the ground level were measured in the historical center of Florence (Italy), from April 2 to June 4, 2020 and from February 1 to June 4, 2020, respectively. As expected, a clear stepwise decrease in CO2 fluxes occurred, evidencing a rapid response of the EC measurements to drop in the urban emissions related to COVID-19-containment measures and domestic heating switch-off. Accordingly, during the observation period a relatively small decrease (i.e. few ppm) in the CO2 concentrations at both ground level and 33 m height was recorded. Moreover, an overall increasing trend of 13C/12C ratios of CO2 and daily CO2-enhancement was observed concomitantly with the gradual easing of severe COVID-19 restrictions.

These trends highlighted that the COVID-19-related short-term (few months) drastic reduction of anthropogenic emission caused, at a local scale, a rapid response of CO2 urban plume. Hence, the COVID-19 crisis made us aware of the importance of our actions to fight the CO2-related climate change, although a worldwide CO2 atmospheric concentration reduction requires a radical and long-lasting CO2 emission cutting and lifestyle changes from each of us.

How to cite: Randazzo, A., Venturi, S., Tassi, F., Buccianti, A., Gioli, B., Gualtieri, G., Capecchiacci, F., Cabassi, J., Brilli, L., Carotenuto, F., Zaldei, A., and Vaselli, O.: The first Coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdown (March-May 2020): temporary drop in anthropogenic emissions reveals the dynamic of CO2 fluxes and concentrations in urban areas, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8473, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8473, 2021.

EGU21-2765 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urban water storage capacity inferred from observed evapotranspiration recession 

Harro Jongen, Gert-Jan Steeneveld, Jason Beringer, Krzysztof Fortuniak, Jinkyu Hong, Je-Woo Hong, Cor Jacobs, Leena Järvi, Fred Meier, Matthias Roth, Natalie Theeuwes, Erik Velasco, and Ryan Teuling

The amount and dynamics of urban water storage play an important role in mitigating urban flooding and heat. Assessment of the capacity of cities to store water remains challenging due to the extreme heterogeneity of the urban surface. Evapotranspiration (ET) recession after rainfall events during the period without precipitation, over which the amount of stored water gradually decreases, can provide insight on the water storage capacity of urban surfaces. Assuming ET is the only outgoing flux, the water storage capacity can be estimated based on the timescale and intercept of its recession. In this paper, we test the proposed approach to estimate the water storage capacity at neighborhood scale with latent heat flux data collected by eddy covariance flux towers in eleven contrasting urban sites with different local climate zones, vegetation cover and characteristics and background climates (Amsterdam, Arnhem, Basel, Berlin, Helsinki, Łódź, Melbourne, Mexico City, Seoul, Singapore, Vancouver). Water storage capacities ranging between 1 and 12 mm were found. These values correspond to e-folding timescales lasting from 2 to 10 days, which translate to half-lives of 1.5 to 7 days. We find ET at the start of a drydown to be positively related to vegetation fraction, and long timescales and large storage capacities to be associated with higher vegetation fractions. According to our results, urban water storage capacity is at least one order of magnitude smaller than the known water storage capacity in natural forests and grassland.

How to cite: Jongen, H., Steeneveld, G.-J., Beringer, J., Fortuniak, K., Hong, J., Hong, J.-W., Jacobs, C., Järvi, L., Meier, F., Roth, M., Theeuwes, N., Velasco, E., and Teuling, R.: Urban water storage capacity inferred from observed evapotranspiration recession , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2765, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2765, 2021.

EGU21-15230 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urban-PLUMBER model evaluation project: initial results

Mathew Lipson, Sue Grimmond, and Martin Best and the Urban-PLUMBER team

We present initial results of the Urban-PLUMBER international model evaluation project. This project assesses the performance of land surface models used in meteorological simulations of urban areas. Phase 1 included 24 models of varying complexity, from simple slab models through to multi-layer urban canopy models.

54 model output variables are requested, including primary surface energy fluxes, anthropogenic heat and moisture fluxes, soil variables, albedo, canopy and building air temperatures. This rich dataset is used to both compare model outputs with observations and to understand factors contributing to model performance.

The project involved a number of other innovations including:

  • An online portal (modelevaluation.org) is used to distribute site data and accept submissions.
  • Upon submission to the portal participants are provided with variable near-instant compliance checks and analyses allowing participants to make corrections if required.
  • A ten-year ERA5-derived spin up which overcomes the typically short period of urban flux tower observations and allows the entire observed period to be used in analyses.
  • Testing models alongside simple empirical benchmarks (e.g. out-of-sample linear regression of turbulent fluxes on shortwave radiation) to assess if input information is used effectively.

We also discuss the initial stages of Phase 2 which involves testing models at many urban sites. From the known global urban flux tower observations, following assessment, 25 are selected to capture a range of urban characteristics and climates. Surface characteristics are gathered, observations quality controlled and prepended with ten years of bias corrected ERA5 meteorological data for spinup. This new standardised urban flux tower dataset will become a valuable tool in future urban modelling projects.

How to cite: Lipson, M., Grimmond, S., and Best, M. and the Urban-PLUMBER team: Urban-PLUMBER model evaluation project: initial results, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15230, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15230, 2021.

EGU21-7806 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Modelling rain heterogeneities within an urban neighbourhood

Karolin S. Ferner, K. Heinke Schlünzen, and Marita Boettcher

Urbanisation locally modifies the regional climate: an urban climate develops. For example, the average wind speed in cities is reduced, while the gustiness is increased. Buildings induce vertical winds, which influence the falling of rain. All these processes lead to heterogeneous patterns of rain at ground and on building surfaces. The small-scale spatial rain heterogeneities may cause discomfort for people. Moreover, non-uniform wetting of buildings affects their hydrothermal performance and durability of their facades.

Measuring rain heterogeneities between buildings is, however, nearly impossible. Building induced wind gusts negatively influence the representativeness of in-situ measurements, especially in densely urbanised areas. Weather radars are usually too coarse and, more importantly, require an unobstructed view over the domain and thus do not measure ground precipitation in urban areas. Consequently, researchers turn to numerical modelling in order to investigate small-scale precipitation heterogeneities between buildings.

In building science, numerical models are used to investigate rain heterogeneities typically focussing on single buildings and vertical facades. Only few studies were performed for more than a single building or with inclusion of atmospheric processes such as radiation or condensation. In meteorology, increasing computational power now allows the use of small-scale obstacle-resolving models resolving atmospheric processes while covering neighbourhoods.

In order to assess rain heterogeneities between buildings we extended the micro-scale and obstacle-resolving transport- and stream model MITRAS (Salim et al. 2019). The same cloud microphysics parameterisation as in its mesoscale sister model METRAS (Schlünzen et al., 2018) was applied and boundary conditions for cloud and rain water content at obstacle surfaces were introduced. MITRAS results are checked for plausibility using radar and in-situ measurements (Ferner et al., 2021). To our knowledge MITRAS is the first numerical urban climate model that includes rain and simulates corresponding processes.

Model simulations were initialised for various wind speeds and mesoscale rain rates to assess their influence on the heterogeneity of falling rain in a domain of 1.9 x 1.7 km² around Hamburg City Hall. We investigated how wind speed or mesoscale rain rate influence the precipitation patterns at ground and at roof level. Based on these results we assessed the height dependence of precipitation. First analyses show that higher buildings receive more rain on their roofs than lower buildings; the results will be presented in detail in our talk.

Ferner, K.S., Boettcher, M., Schlünzen, K.H. (2021): Modelling the heterogeneity of rain in an urban neighbourhood. Publication in preparation

Salim, M.H., Schlünzen, K.H., Grawe, D., Boettcher, M., Gierisch, A.M.U., Fock B.H. (2018): The microscale obstacle-resolving meteorological model MITRAS v2.0: model theory. Geosci. Model Dev., 11, 3427–3445, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-11-3427-2018.

Schlünzen, K.H., Boettcher, M., Fock, B.H., Gierisch, A.M.U., Grawe, D., and Salim, M. (2018): Scientific Documentation of the Multiscale Model System M-SYS. Meteorological Institute, Universität Hamburg. MEMI Technical Report 4

How to cite: Ferner, K. S., Schlünzen, K. H., and Boettcher, M.: Modelling rain heterogeneities within an urban neighbourhood, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7806, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7806, 2021.

EGU21-3057 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Assessment of Urbanization Impact On Heavy Precipitation in Istanbul, Turkey

Kutay Dönmez, Berkay Dönmez, Deniz Diren-Üstün, and Yurdanur Ünal

Cities have undergone a substantial increase in urbanization over the past decades. Whether the change in land-use type and the consequent Urban Heat Island (UHI) affects the extreme precipitation was of interest and has been under investigation for various developing cities. This study pursued a similar purpose and investigated the impact of urbanization on a heavy precipitation incident that took place in Istanbul on 18 July 2017. Two particular land-use scenarios were used to simulate the event by Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF). First, the control simulation (WRF-urban) was performed using the default CORINE 2018 land-use dataset. Subsequently, the test simulation (WRF-nourban) was implemented by replacing the urbanized land-use type of Istanbul with the most dominant land use category of arid cultivated area. Comparison of the WRF-urban simulation with station observations and satellite data reveal that the WRF captured the heavy precipitation event reasonably well over Istanbul.  Results showed that urbanization has a notable impact on both the magnitude and timing of heavy rainfall. Event day total precipitation amount decreased considerably over urbanized regions of Istanbul on the control run. Although the start time and location of the incident reasonably matched for both runs, the control run with urbanization advanced the rainfall quicker over Istanbul, and the heavy precipitation event took place about 1 hour earlier than the test run without urbanization. Another pronounced distinction between the simulations with and without urbanization is detected over the north of Istanbul as the maximum daily total precipitation line slightly shifted northwest on the WRF-urban run compared to the WRF-nourban run. This result indicates that urban-areas may have a substantial effect on the direction of the airflow. Analysis of both vertical cross-sections and sensible heat fluxes on the city revealed that urbanized areas increased the atmospheric instability, thus caused heavier precipitation.

How to cite: Dönmez, K., Dönmez, B., Diren-Üstün, D., and Ünal, Y.: Assessment of Urbanization Impact On Heavy Precipitation in Istanbul, Turkey, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3057, 2021.

EGU21-11145 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Modelling the impact of a Sub-Saharan metropolis (Kampala) on the local climate during specific meteorological conditions of a dry season

Oscar Brousse, Jonas Van de Walle, Matthias Demuzere, Alberto Martilli, Nicole van Lipzig, Andrea Zonato, and Clare Heaviside

In order to build resilient cities in face of climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa, much is to be done to understand the impact of rapid and uncontrolled urbanization on the local climate in the region. Recent efforts by Brousse et al. (2019, 2020) demonstrated that using generic urban parameter information  derived out of Local Climate Zones (LCZ ; Stewart and Oke, 2012) maps created through the World Urban Database and Access Portal Tool framework (Ching et al. 2018) may be used to model the impact of Sub-Saharan African cities on their local climate – using the case of Kampala, the capital city of Uganda. These studies showed that despite the characteristic data scarcity on urban typologies that is present in Sub-Saharan Africa, LCZ could be used as a solution for modelling and studying the urban climates in the region.

Yet these conclusions were only obtained through the use of the bulk-level urban canopy model TERRA_URB, embedded in the COSMO-CLM regional climate model. We therefore test the applicability of a more complex urban canopy models – the Building Effect Parameterization coupled to the Building Energy Model (BEP-BEM) – over the region. To do so, we focus on short periods with specific meteorological conditions during the dry season spanning from December 2017 to February 2018. These are obtained through a k-means clustering over hourly weather measurements given by the automatic weather station located at the Makerere University, in the city-center of Kampala. Wind direction and speed, 2-meter air temperature, incoming short-wave radiation, precipitation, daily temperature range, 2-meter air relative humidity and near-surface pressure are used to depict 5 weather typologies (ie. clusters) during the dry season. We chose to keep only periods with 5 consecutive days of one weather typology, which results in three 5-day periods of distinct typology. We then run the model for these periods and evaluate its outputs against the state-of-the-art simulation by Brousse et al. (2020) as well as in-situ and satellite observations for certain meteorological variables. After that, we show the effect of the recent urbanization on the local climate for each of those three periods and relate it to the variability in urban heat.

This study is the first to model a tropical African city at 1 km horizontal resolution using the BEP-BEM model embedded in WRF. The latter could have major implications as more complex urban canopy models coupled to building energy models could shed light on the impact of the built environment on the livability of indoor and outdoor environments in these cities. Furthermore, insights could indeed be gained on the contribution of air conditioning heat fluxes to outdoor temperatures and the energetic consumption needed to keep indoor environments at an optimal temperature. Additionally, by resolving the urban environment in three dimensions, BEP-BEM could help increase our understanding of how specific urban planning and architectural adaptation strategies (like green or cool roofs, roof top solar panel, new building materials, urban greening etc.) may increase the citizens’ thermal comfort and reduce negative health impacts under specific weather conditions.

How to cite: Brousse, O., Van de Walle, J., Demuzere, M., Martilli, A., van Lipzig, N., Zonato, A., and Heaviside, C.: Modelling the impact of a Sub-Saharan metropolis (Kampala) on the local climate during specific meteorological conditions of a dry season, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11145, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11145, 2021.

EGU21-3562 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Numerical simulation of thermal effects of urban green enhancements in different urban environments in the city of Augsburg (Bavaria, SE Germany)

Christoph Beck, Katharina Buse, Marisa Fritsch, and Philipp Irber

The interdisciplinary research project Abc (Augsburg bleibt cool – Augsburg stays cool) – funded by the German Federal Ministry for Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety – deals with different aspects of heat-stress exposure and adaptation to heat-stress in indoor and outdoor urban environments in the urban area of Augsburg (Bavaria, SE Germany).

As one essential research approach this includes the estimation of the thermal effects of vegetation enhancements in different urban environments via numerical simulations performed with the ENVI-met V4 numerical model.

For several model domains – each of them covering 300 m x 300 m with a 2 m x 2 m horizontal resolution - model runs have been performed utilizing observational data for a heat wave end of July 2019 as meteorological forcing, thus serving as a climate analogue for thermal conditions expected to appear more frequently under future climate change conditions. For each domain model runs for the current-state and several adaptation scenarios have been performed. Adaptation scenarios thereby comprise varying measures for enhancing urban green (street and facade greening) and blue infrastructure.

In this contribution we present and discuss selected model settings and scenarios.

Model results indicate the general capability of vegetation enhancements to counteract heat-stress exposure in urban environments. However, partly also contrary effects emerge pointing to the complex interdependencies within the urban climate system which have to be taken into account when projecting urban heat island adaptation strategies.

How to cite: Beck, C., Buse, K., Fritsch, M., and Irber, P.: Numerical simulation of thermal effects of urban green enhancements in different urban environments in the city of Augsburg (Bavaria, SE Germany), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3562, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3562, 2021.

EGU21-4336 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Assessment of a meteorological mesoscale model’s capability to simulate intra-urban thermal variability in a tropical city

Beatriz Sanchez, Matthias Roth, Andrés Simón-Moral, Alberto Martilli, and Erik Velasco

Large spatial differences in canopy-layer air temperature are found across the city as a consequence of distinct urban morphologies and anthropogenic activities throughout the urban landscape. Model-based studies investigating the spatial and temporal variability of air temperature are commonly employed to assess heat mitigation strategies in cities. It is therefore important that models are capable to accurately predict air temperature variability across the city to account for the local climate context. This study explores the sensitivity of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model coupled with a multi-layer urban scheme (BEP-BEM) to simulate intra-urban variations of 2-m air temperature during different synoptic conditions in a tropical city, Singapore. An accurate representation of the real heterogeneous urban morphology of Singapore is implemented in the model. Two one-month long simulations are conducted for distinct synoptic weather conditions: (a) a relatively wet period during the SW monsoon and (b) a very dry period during the NE monsoon. The performance of the model is firstly evaluated against micrometeorological data collected by a tall eddy covariance flux tower in a representative low-rise residential neighbourhood. Overall good performance is obtained for wind speed and direction, turbulence parameters and surface energy balance components, in particular during dry conditions. Some difficulties are found in predicting intermittent cloud cover, which results in an overestimation of net radiation increasing model errors during the wetter period. Hence the comparison of 2-m air temperatures against observations results in slightly higher errors during the latter period (RMSE<2.3°C) compared to the dry period (RMSE<1.6°C) using data from nine locations with different urban morphologies. Notable underestimation (overestimation) is obtained for the nighttime temperature at the most densely built-up (rural) area. A significant logarithmic relation between minimum nocturnal temperature and average aspect ratio is nevertheless obtained for both observations and simulations. Further analysis during clear sky conditions in both periods reveals that the spatial distribution of the diurnal temperature range computed at the urban locations varies according to synoptic conditions. The present research demonstrates the capability of the model to predict the intra-urban variability across distinct urban morphologies, however, it fails to accurately capture absolute differences in air temperature.

How to cite: Sanchez, B., Roth, M., Simón-Moral, A., Martilli, A., and Velasco, E.: Assessment of a meteorological mesoscale model’s capability to simulate intra-urban thermal variability in a tropical city, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4336, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4336, 2021.

EGU21-3293 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Adaptation of the urban climate model PALM-4U for Wuerzburg, Germany

Miriam Baumann and Heiko Paeth

The European Union-funded research project 'BigData@Geo ­­­­­­­­- Advanced Environmental Technologies using AI on the Web' is dedicated to researching connections and interactions in the natural regional environmental system. This includes the development of a high-resolution regional earth system model for modelling climate change in Northern Bavaria, Germany.

This research aims to run an urban climate model based on the Parallelized Large-Eddy Simulation Model for Urban Applications (PALM-4U) for Lower Franconia and thus to simulate the Main Valley with a focus on Wuerzburg in a high resolution of up to one meter. As part of this, PALM-4U is coupled to the regional climate model REMO to use generated dynamic input data in addition to static data, for example relating to buildings, roads, waterways, bridges, roof greening etc. in the simulation. The effects of variable development and the influence of green spaces and vegetation – especially also of street trees – on the urban climate are thereby considered, taking into account climate change in the 21st century. Furthermore, changes in the boundary conditions, topography and land use are also part of the research and compared using historical, current and future scenarios.

First results of the coupled model, its urban climate components and of applied approaches such as nesting will be shown. Besides possibilities for their evaluation, possible further steps are also presented.

 

How to cite: Baumann, M. and Paeth, H.: Adaptation of the urban climate model PALM-4U for Wuerzburg, Germany, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3293, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3293, 2021.

EGU21-4198 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Investigating vegetation role on UHI with mechanistic modelling worldwide

Ziyan Zhang, Athanasios Paschalis, Ana Mijic, Naika Meili, and Simone Fatichi

The urban heat island effect (UHI), defined as the temperature difference between urban areas and their surroundings, has been widely observed in many cities worldwide, impacting urban energy demand, citizen’s comfort and health. UHI intensities have been found to depend on background climate, and the urban fabric, including built (building thermal properties, heights, reflectance) and natural characteristics (vegetation cover, species composition, vegetation management). In this study, we focus on developing a global scale mechanistic understanding of how each of those properties alters the urban energy budget and leads to UHI development. To achieve this goal, we use the state-of-art urban ecohydrological and land-surface model (urban Tethys-Chloris) to perform a set of detailed UHI simulations for multiple large urban clusters across America, Europe and China in a 10-year time period (2009-2019), spanning a gradient of aridity, vegetation amount, and different compositions of the urban fabric. Model simulations were set up using the latest generation remote sensing data and climate reanalysis (ERA5). Using the simulations, we develop a paradigm of how UHIs develop worldwide, and propose viable solutions for sustainable UHI mitigation.

How to cite: Zhang, Z., Paschalis, A., Mijic, A., Meili, N., and Fatichi, S.: Investigating vegetation role on UHI with mechanistic modelling worldwide, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4198, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4198, 2021.

EGU21-11867 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Combining CFD and GIS software capabilities to enhance rapid fine-scale urban micro- and bioclimatic modelling 

Yannick Back, Prashant Kumar, Peter Marcus Bach, Alrun Jasper-Tönnies, Wolfgang Rauch, and Manfred Kleidorfer

Cities around the world are under constant change. Population growth is leading to an increasing demand for residential, commercial and traffic areas and thus leading to progressive surface sealing and urban densification. Adding on the existing and growing challenging situation, the Earth’s climate is undergoing dramatical changes. Globally affecting cities by altering local temperature patterns, enhancing the occurrence of dry periods and increasing the frequency of Excessive Heat Events (EHE) as well as tropical nights per year, urban planning is becoming increasingly demanding. These consequences put cities (citizens and infrastructure) at risk, amplifying urban heat and the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect. To ensure anticipatory and holistic planning approaches to counteract the consequences of climate change, specific tools must be developed enabling consideration of different aspects and boundary conditions as well as analysis of crucial processes and complex relationships within the urban environments. Therefore, we introduce a simple and fast spatial GIS-based modelling approach to carry out fine-scale simulations for land surface temperature (LST), mean radiant temperature (MRT) and Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) in a 2D urban environment. This modelling approach combines a fine-scale surface classification, comprised of eight different surface classes, thermal characteristics (global radiation, direct radiation and diffuse radiation), surface characteristics (Emissivity and Bowen-Ratio values) and meteorological input data. Based on this combined dataset and well-established physical relations in the model set-up, the model uses an adapted approach to first evaluate LST, followed by the MRT and finally the UTCI. A DEM (Digital Elevation Model), a CIR-Image (Coloured Infrared Image) and a vector layer depicting building geometry are required as model input datasets. The accuracy of the input datasets determines the accuracy of the output datasets including the three main indicators. To improve this modelling approach and to consider the effects of climate change, we combine this spatial GIS-approach with the capabilities of computational fluid dynamics (CFD). We use CFD software to simulate wind velocities as well as air temperatures based on certain input parameters. Simulation time strongly depends on the complexity of the urban form within the area of interest. Therefore, a specific urban area was selected and the building structure, as well as the tree structure, was approximated by a self-designed 3D model. An additional input data set containing LST is provided by the modelling approach described above. Temperature data of the building envelope was conducted using a thermal infrared camera, with on-site measurements in the study area carried out during the summer of 2020. Among other settings, an initial wind speed and air temperature define the boundary conditions. Transferring calculated wind speed and air temperature datasets for different heights across the study area using CFD into the GIS based approach, leads to improved spatial LST, MRT and UTCI calculations and results and thus enhanced urban micro- and bioclimatic modelling.

How to cite: Back, Y., Kumar, P., Bach, P. M., Jasper-Tönnies, A., Rauch, W., and Kleidorfer, M.: Combining CFD and GIS software capabilities to enhance rapid fine-scale urban micro- and bioclimatic modelling , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11867, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11867, 2021.

EGU21-12369 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Observational evidence of urban heat island intensification during heatwaves in European cities

Marco Possega, Leonardo Aragão, Paolo Ruggieri, Marco Antonio Santo, and Silvana Di Sabatino

Heatwaves (HWs) are extreme weather conditions characterized by persistent high temperatures with considerable impacts on society in terms of mortality, thermal stress and energy demand of the population. One of the most interesting aspects of HWs concerns the interaction with the phenomenon of urban heat island (UHI). The UHI is the tendency of urbanized areas to have warmer temperatures than the surrounding rural areas, mainly due to the thermal properties of materials forming urban environment and the heat produced by human activities. Some studies analyzed the behavior of UHI during periods of extreme heat, showing an amplification of the gradient of temperature between urban and rural areas in HW conditions, but the results are often limited to case studies with a single HW and/or a specific city. Other papers dealt with the same topic by examining events on various cities using outputs of global models, but with resolution insufficient to include in detail urban-scale processes and therefore to take into account specific properties of the cities investigated. The approach of this work consisted in providing observational evidence and extending the aforementioned results, studying the effect of HWs on UHI in about ten European cities with different characteristics (geography, topography, urban planning) through the analysis of daily maximum/minimum temperatures data measured by meteorological stations for the summers of period 2006-2019. In particular, the intensity of UHI was assessed through the computation of a Composite UHI Index (UHII), defined as the difference between averaged urban and non-urban values. The different behavior of UHII during HWs compared to "normal" summer days (NO) in selected European cities was investigated, detecting an intensification of index values regarding periods of extreme heat for the majority of examined locations. More specifically, the analysis of temporal evolution of UHII was conducted, revealing an average increase of this index during the occurrence of HW events. Moreover, a correlation between UHI index and maximum temperature anomalies was examined, and HW days appeared to exhibit a larger percentage of positive UHII with respect to NO days, showing also higher absolute values. This work provides an indication of how European urban areas respond to severe hot periods and could be useful to validate numerical model simulations for more detailed analysis, for example regarding mitigation strategies. Finally, the emergence of some outliers, namely cities whose UHI manifested a different reaction to HWs, may deserve dedicated studies in the future.

How to cite: Possega, M., Aragão, L., Ruggieri, P., Santo, M. A., and Di Sabatino, S.: Observational evidence of urban heat island intensification during heatwaves in European cities, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12369, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12369, 2021.

EGU21-6320 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

What is the most threatening for citizens of a mid-latitude city: cold stress or heat stress?

Sara Top, Dragan Milošević, Steven Caluwaerts, and Stevan Savić

Both heat and cold waves cause extreme human thermal discomfort and a clear excess in mortality. This shows the importance of knowing the prevailing thermal comfort conditions and how thermal comfort conditions vary in various environments so measures can be taken. Microclimatic and outdoor human thermal comfort conditions are investigated in various built-up and green areas in the city of Ghent (Belgium) using meteorological measurements of six weather stations of the MOCCA (Monitoring the Cities Climate and Atmosphere) network in combination with calculations done by RayMan.

Normal to extreme summer heat wave periods show that dangerous strong heat stress prevails during the daytime periods at all locations. Comparison of thermal comfort during normal and extreme summer heat wave periods showed that heat stress is more extreme when a heat wave is more intense. Overall the urban park in Ghent was the most comfortable location during heat waves since it effectively mitigates heat stress in the city. These results should be taken into account in urban planning and design to keep mid-latitude cities livable.

Further, a one year data series revealed that outdoor cold stress was more apparent during 2017 in the mid-latitude city of Ghent that experiences a mild maritime climate. During spring and summer, both heat stress and cold stress occurred due to the larger diurnal temperature range compared to the other seasons. Even though high Physiological Equivalent Temperatures (PET) were obtained during a heat wave in summer, heat stress did not occur as intensely and as frequently compared to cold stress on annual level. It could thus be stated that outdoors, cold stress is a bigger threat than heat stress. However, one should keep in mind that the study was executed for outdoor thermal heat comfort and that people will take shelter or take measures when feeling uncomfortable. The question is thus rather, how are citizens protected against heat and cold stress? Currently, the Belgian society is better adapted to cold stress since most buildings contain central heating, while air conditioning is not standard. Future projections predict an increase in temperature, causing more occurrence of extreme heat stress, while extreme cold stress will be reduced. Additionally, the urban heat island effect currently has mainly a positive effect on the average annual outdoor thermal comfort conditions, while it will become a negative effect in the warmer future. Measures should thus be taken to reduce the threat of future heat stress.

How to cite: Top, S., Milošević, D., Caluwaerts, S., and Savić, S.: What is the most threatening for citizens of a mid-latitude city: cold stress or heat stress?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6320, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6320, 2021.

In our research we describe the micro-climatological influences of two heat-waves around and the air temperature development in a certain old people’s home in Helsinki, Finland. The stand-alone six-storey concrete building was erected in the late 1970’s and represents the prevailing construction type of this area. The building is located on a slightly southwards declining slope.

The first simulation used real meteorological forcing-data from the heat-wave event in summer 2018, which lasted from July, 13th until August, 5th. In this period the daily maximum air temperature reached almost every day 25 °C and more, sometimes even more than 30 °C. All air temperature, wind, humidity, and solar radiation (cloudiness) measurements were conducted at a near-by synoptical weather station.

The second simulation used fourteen-day constructed meteorological forcing-data, based on a clear-sky, slowly increasing air temperature, higher than normal humidity, and low wind conditions assumption starting on July, 13th (day 194 of the year).

We used the holistic ENVI-met simulation soft-ware to simulate the physical environment around the old people’s home and especially the energy fluxes inside the concrete walls to explain the needs for cooling demands.

The research is part of the HEATCLIM-project financed by the Academy of Finland Science Program CLIHE (2020-2023).

How to cite: Drebs, A., Sinsel, T., and Jylhä, K.: Micro-climatological influences on temperature condition in an old people’s home in Helsinki, Finland, caused by extended heat-waves , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10897, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10897, 2021.

EGU21-9102 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Building a new high-density air temperature measurement network in two Swiss cities

Julien G. Anet, Sebastian Schlögl, Curdin Spirig, Martin P. Frey, Manuel Renold, and Karl G. Gutbrod

With progressive climate change, weather extremes are very likely to become more frequent. While rural regions may suffer from more intense and longer drought periods, urban spaces are going to be particularly affected by severe heat waves. This urban temperature anomaly, also known as “urban heat island” (UHI), can be traced back to different factors, the most prominent being soil sealing, lower albedo and lack of effective ventilation.

City planners have started developing mitigation strategies to reduce future forecasted heat stress in urban regions. While some heat reduction strategies are currently intensely scrutinized and applied within pilot projects, the efficiency of latter mitigation actions can be overseen due to the low density of reference in situ air temperature measurements in urban environments. The same problem applies when trying to benchmark modeling studies of UHI as the amount of benchmarking data may be insufficient.

To overcome this lack of data, over the last two years, a dense air temperature measurement network has been installed in the Swiss cities of Basel and Zurich, counting more than 450 sensors. The low-cost air temperature sensors are installed on street lamps and traffic signs in different local climate zones of the city with an emphasis on street canyons, where air temperatures are expected to be the largest and most of the city’s population lives and works. These low-cost sensors add valuable meteorological information in cities and complement the WMO reference stations.

Air temperature measurements from the low-cost sensor network were controlled for accuracy, reliability and robustness and homogenized in order to minimize radiation errors, although 40% of the stations were equipped with self-built radiation shields, allowing an efficient passive ventilation of the installed sensors.

We demonstrate the strength of our network by presenting first results of two exemplary heat waves that occurred in July 2019 and August 2020 and show that a) the radiation-error corrected datasets correlate well with different high-quality reference WMO stations, and b) the existence of urban heat islands in Zurich and Basel can be well confirmed, showing significant air temperature differences of several degrees between rural and urban areas.

The results demonstrate the advantages of a high-density low-cost air temperature network as a benchmark for future urban heat islands modelling studies.

How to cite: Anet, J. G., Schlögl, S., Spirig, C., Frey, M. P., Renold, M., and Gutbrod, K. G.: Building a new high-density air temperature measurement network in two Swiss cities, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9102, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9102, 2021.

EGU21-9727 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Re-thinking “Smart City” – transferring urban climate research into city planning processes

Joachim Fallmann, Hans Schipper, Stefan Emeis, Marc Barra, and Holger Tost

With more and more people residing in cities globally, urban areas are particularly vulnerable to climate change. It is therefore important, that the principles of climate-resilient city planning are reflected in the planning phase already. A discussion of adaptation measures requires a holistic understanding of the complex urban environment, and necessarily has to involve cross-scale interactions, both spatially and temporally. This work examines the term “Smart City” with regard to its suitability for the definition of sustainable urban planning based on urban climate studies over the past decade and own modelling work. Existing literature is assessed from a meteorological perspective in order to answer the question how results from these studies can be linked to architectural design of future urban areas. It has been long understood that measures such as urban greening, or so-called "Nature Based Solutions", are able to dampen excess heat and help reducing energetic costs. As numerous studies show however, integrating vegetation in the urban landscape shares a double role in regional adaptation to climate change due to both cooling effect and air pollution control. Using the state-of-the-art chemical transport model MECO(n) coupled to the urban canopy parametrisation TERRA_URB, we simulated a case study for the Rhine-Main metropolitan region in Germany, highlighting mutual unwanted relationships in modern city planning. Hence, we oppose the so-called compact city approach to an urban greening scenario with regard to the potential for both heat island mitigation and air quality.

How to cite: Fallmann, J., Schipper, H., Emeis, S., Barra, M., and Tost, H.: Re-thinking “Smart City” – transferring urban climate research into city planning processes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9727, 2021.

EGU21-7723 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Carbon dioxide emissions variability monitoring, based on four years of Eddy Covariance measurements in a typical Mediterranean city

Konstantinos Politakos, Stavros Stagakis, and Nektarios Chrysoulakis

Urban areas around the globe are growing rapidly and as a consequence the anthropogenic effects on the environment are ever-increasing. Understanding the dynamics, procedures and mechanics behind urban greenhouse gas emissions is a challenge for the scientific community. This study investigates the variability of urban CO2 emissions in the city centre of Heraklion, a typical Mediterranean city in Greece, during a four-year period with gradual changes in the traffic regulations and changes in traffic patterns due to the recent restriction measures imposed to limit the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. The CO2 flux (Fc) was measured using the Eddy Covariance (EC) method with a single tower-based system, permanently installed in the centre of the city. Fc was calculated at a 30-min time step and the time-series were quality-controlled and gap-filled using a moving look-up table (mLUT) technique. Fc time series were then aggregated to monthly and yearly emissions totals. Annual flux source area was estimated with the Flux Footprint Prediction (FFP) model, parameterized using measured atmospheric parameters and urban morphological parameters extracted from a Digital Surface Model. The source area was characterized by complex urban morphology and land use types. Specifically, at North of the tower a commercial zone is located, where significantly higher Fc patterns were detected, compared to South, where a residential area dominates. A gradual reduction to CO2 emissions has been observed since 2016, due to urban planning interventions related to pedestalization of extended areas in the city centre and traffic regulation. During the COVID-19 lockdown period in the Spring of 2020, the diurnal Fc patterns and the monthly aggregated Fc showed significant reductions in the order of 70 % compared to the previous years. Fc values returned to the previous years’ levels with the end of the lock-down in the summer 2020, as it was expected. Finally, during the second lock-down, started in Greece in November 2020, the CO2 emissions were higher compared to the first lock-down, reflecting a higher level of mobility in Heraklion centre.

How to cite: Politakos, K., Stagakis, S., and Chrysoulakis, N.: Carbon dioxide emissions variability monitoring, based on four years of Eddy Covariance measurements in a typical Mediterranean city, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7723, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7723, 2021.

EGU21-8210 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

MOPGA/Improving Air Quality in West Africa: Low-cost sensors as a solution to improve the understanding of spatial and temporal variability in urban air pollution

Julien Bahino, Michael Giordano, Véronique Yoboué, Arsène Ochou, Corinne Galy-Lacaux, Cathy Liousse, Kofi Amegah, Allison Hugues, James Nimo, Matthias Beekmann, and Ramachandran Subramanian

This study was carried out within the framework of the Improving Air Quality in West Africa (IAQWA) project funded by the Make Our Planet Great Again (MOPGA) program. In recent years, West African countries have experienced an economic upturn driven by GDP growth of nearly 3.7% in 2019 (AfDB, 2020). This economic boom is mainly felt in the cities where it promotes the construction of highway infrastructure, real estate development, and industry. All these activities are sources of air pollution. Unfortunately, there is almost no air quality monitoring in these cities partly due to the high cost of monitoring instruments. Low-cost air quality monitoring instruments can help improve the spatial and temporal resolution of measurements at relatively lower cost. However, the installation of these instruments in West African environments characterized by high relative humidity requires their calibration through collocation with reference instruments. The IAQWA project aims to improve our understanding of air pollutants such as fine particulate matter mass (PM2.5), ozone (O3), nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulfur dioxide (SO2), and carbon monoxide (CO) in Abidjan and Accra, two major West African capitals, through the deployment of Real-time Affordable Multi-Pollutant (RAMP) monitors.

Since February 2020, five RAMPs have been installed and are operating continuously at various sites in Abidjan and Lamto in Cote d'Ivoire, and four RAMPs have been operating in Accra, Ghana. Some of the RAMPs have been collocated with PM and/or NOx reference instruments. At other sites the RAMPs have been collocated with INDAAF passive samplers and passive aerosol collectors. These collocations have allowed for the development of calibration models for these low-cost sensors. The performance of these calibration models is presented here along with the diurnal and seasonal variations of air pollution at the different sites in Abidjan and Accra. These results will eventually be used to improve our understanding of the drivers of air pollution in these major West African cities, which is essential to choosing sustainable development pathways in the future.

How to cite: Bahino, J., Giordano, M., Yoboué, V., Ochou, A., Galy-Lacaux, C., Liousse, C., Amegah, K., Hugues, A., Nimo, J., Beekmann, M., and Subramanian, R.: MOPGA/Improving Air Quality in West Africa: Low-cost sensors as a solution to improve the understanding of spatial and temporal variability in urban air pollution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8210, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8210, 2021.

EGU21-15349 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Spatio-temporal variations of PM2.5 and Respiratory Deposition Dose (RDD) before and during different COVID-19 lockdown phases at Delhi, India

Sadaf Fatima, Ajit Ahlawat, Sumit Mishra, Vijay Soni, and Randeep Guleria

Present study explores pre-lockdown (1st January-24th March, 2020) and during lockdown (25th March-20th June, 2020) air quality changes in PM2.5 along with meteorological effects at megacity- Delhi (28.7041°N, 77.1025°E). Alipur (Rural), Okhla (Industrial) and Pusa Road (Traffic dominant area) experienced mean concentrations (S.D.) of PM2.5 as 87.56(±54.06), 124.45(±73.49) and 62.14(±58.64) µg/mbefore lockdown(BL; 1st January-24th March, 2020), while for Lockdown1(L1; 25th March-14th April, 2020), PM2.5 decreased drastically as 39.26(±16.31), 38.01(±15.16) and 31.03(±12.79) µg/m3 and gradually increased during Lockdown2(L2; 15th April-3rd May, 2020), Lockdown3(L3; : 4th May-17th May, 2020), Lockdown4(L4; 18th May-31st May, 2020), respectively. Percentage decrease in PM2.5 (-69.46%) correlated with outdoor activities of percentage decrease (-70 to -80%) in L1, from BL phase. Exposure assessment study showed, mean Respiratory Deposition Dose-RDD (S.D.) (µg/hr) for fine particles [Particle diameter (Dp) =0.5 µm] for walk and sit mode during BL, as 27.22(±13.53) and 9.90(±4.91) for Alipur, 30.55(±18.04) and 11.11(±6.56) for Okhla, and 28.67(±14.39) and 10.43(±5.23) for Pusa road, and decreased during L1 as 9.64(±4.00) and 3.50(±1.46) for Alipur, 9.33(±3.72) and 3.39(±1.35) for Okhla, and 7.62(±3.14) and 2.77(±1.14) for Pusa road, respectively. Delhiites were exposed to more fine RDD(walk/sit) before lockdown than during lockdown phases. People in sit mode found less exposed to fine RDD, in comparison to walk condition. The people living indoors were affected by outdoor RDD exposure with windows open condition, while exposed to different indoor pollution sources with windows closed condition during lockdown. Authors suggest avoid use of closed conditioned indoors and ACs; frequent opening of windows to lower the RDD and to minimize the COVID-19 virus transmission via particulates.

Keywords: PM2.5, RDD, COVID-19.

How to cite: Fatima, S., Ahlawat, A., Mishra, S., Soni, V., and Guleria, R.: Spatio-temporal variations of PM2.5 and Respiratory Deposition Dose (RDD) before and during different COVID-19 lockdown phases at Delhi, India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15349, 2021.

EGU21-10790 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

The Impact of Covid-19 Lockdown on the Urban Micro-Climate of Major Coastal vs Inland Cities of India

Sutapa Bhattacharjee and Rishikesh Bharti

The climatic or meteorological characteristics over a city is significantly influenced by the city dynamics resulting in evolution of a typical micro-climatic condition enveloping the city and peripheral region. The shrinkage and expansion of the urban boundary layer depends on the dimension, design and functioning of a city and its physiographic setup. The lockdown that was enforced for varying durations globally to restrict the Covid-19 pandemic gave an extraordinary opportunity to understand the urban micro-climatic systems with substantially reduced urban operations. Therefore, the present study aims to evaluate the nature of temperature and precipitation conditions for 6 major cities in India, primarily accentuated by the urban fabric and design; during the strict as well as phased lockdown period in India (April – June, 2020). The principal objective of the study is to determine if moderation in transportation as well as commercial and industrial activities which are considered as the backbone of a metropolitan, can regulate the micro-climatic system it emanates. A comparative analysis has been attempted between the three coastal (Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata) and three inland (Delhi, Hyderabad, Bangalore) cities to gather an understanding of the impact-magnitude, the sea has on urban meteorology. Meteorological reanalysis, satellite as well as in-situ Automatic Weather Station data products have been used for the analysis and validation of results. During the month of April when the lockdown was most stringent, there was an evident improvement in air quality with decrease in the concentration of PM2.5, PM10 and AOD (Aerosol Optical Depth) for all the cities in a range of 30 – 60 percent. To examine the direct and indirect impact of the decreased levels of air pollution on the shortwave as well as longwave radiation responsible for creating the UHI effect as well as abnormal rainfall intensity; the air temperature, land surface temperature (LST) and total amount of rainfall received by the individual cities on a daily as well as hourly basis have been considered. The study reveals that there is notable difference in LST and air temperature in the inland cities during the said period in comparison to the previous years, with relative decrease in both minimum and maximum temperature and significant increase in the number of days with lower temperatures. The pattern of high intensity rain events which is typical to intensive urbanization also experienced definite transformation in Bangalore and Delhi even during the phased lockdown period. However, the modification in all these meteorological parameters were observed to be relatively less significant in case of the coastal cities which solidifies the prominence of coastal influence in such metropolis. Therefore, the study concludes that the rapid strengthening of urban micro-climate and its consequences can be mitigated by implementing strategic reduction in core urban activities, especially for cities without external physiographic influence.

How to cite: Bhattacharjee, S. and Bharti, R.: The Impact of Covid-19 Lockdown on the Urban Micro-Climate of Major Coastal vs Inland Cities of India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10790, 2021.

The flow in inertial sublayer (ISL) is horizontally homogeneous where the Monin–Obukhov similarity theory (MOST) well describes the flux-gradient relationship.  In contrast, roughness sublayer (RSL) flow is highly inhomogeneous. Its dynamics is influenced by the length scale of individual roughness elements. This study presents an analytical solution to the mean wind profile for both ISL and RSL by adding a new function in the flux-gradient relationship to handle the RSL dynamics. The mean wind speeds measured in the wind tunnel experiments over a range of idealized and real urban geometries are well predicted by the new analytical solution. The root-mean-square errors (RMSE) are reduced over an order of magnitude compared with the conventional logarithmic law of the wall (log-law). Its key parameter, the RSL constant converges asymptotically to μ = 1.7 for urban setting which is different from that (μ = 2.6) for vegetation canopy. The RSL turbulence intermittency is revealed by higher-order moments of velocities, probability density function (PDF), quadrant analysis, and conditional sampling. Ejection Q2 (-u’’, +w”) and sweep Q4 (+u’’, -w”) dominate in both RSL and ISL but with different share. Unlike the ISL, Q2 occurs more frequently (but contributes less to momentum flux) than Q4 in the RSL. It is thus suggested that RSL turbulent transport is driven by occasional, fast motions of accelerating downward flow (Q4) and bulk, slow decelerating upward flow (Q2).

How to cite: Mo, Z. and Liu, C.-H.: Wind Speed Parameterization and Turbulence Intermittency in the Roughness Sublayers over Urban Areas: a Wind Tunnel Study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3992, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3992, 2021.

EGU21-11307 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

The impact of London on a low-level jet

Aristofanis Tsiringakis, Natalie Theeuwes, Janet Barlow, and Gert-Jan Steeneveld

The low-level jet (LLJ) is an important phenomenon that can affect (and is affected by) the turbulence in the nocturnal urban boundary layer (UBL). We investigate the interaction of a regional LLJ with the UBL during a 2-day period over London. Observations from two Doppler Lidars and two numerical weather prediction models (Weather Research & Forecasting model and UKV Met Office Unified Model) are used to compared the LLJ characteristics (height, speed and fall-off) between a urban (London) and a rural (Chilbolton) site. We find that LLJs are elevated (70m) over London, due to the deeper UBL, an effect of the increased vertical mixing over the urban area and the difference in the topography between the two sites. Wind speed and fall-off are slightly reduced with respect to the rural LLJ. The effects of the urban area and the surrounding topography on the LLJ characteristics over London are isolated through idealized sensitivity experiments. We find that topography strongly affects the LLJ characteristics (height, falloff, and speed), but there is still a substantial urban influence.

How to cite: Tsiringakis, A., Theeuwes, N., Barlow, J., and Steeneveld, G.-J.: The impact of London on a low-level jet, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11307, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11307, 2021.

EGU21-11385 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

LCZ Generator: online tool to create Local Climate Zone maps

Matthias Demuzere, Jonas Kittner, and Benjamin Bechtel

Since their introduction in 2012, Local Climate Zones (LCZs) emerged as a new standard for characterising urban landscapes, providing a holistic classification approach that takes into account micro-scale land-cover and associated physical properties. In 2015, as part of the community-based World Urban Database and Access Portal Tools (WUDAPT) project, a protocol was developed that enables the mapping of cities into LCZs, using freely available data and software packages, yet performed on local computing facilities. The ‘LCZ Generator’ described here further simplifies this process, providing an online platform that maps a city of interest into LCZs, solely expecting a valid training area file and some metadata as input. The tool integrates the state-of-the-art of LCZ mapping, and simultaneously provides an automated accuracy assessment, training data derivatives and a novel approach to identify suspicious training areas. In addition, this development will ease the dissemination of maps and metadata. We anticipate this development will significantly ease the accessibility and workflow of researchers and practitioners interested in using the LCZ framework for a variety of urban-induced human and environmental impacts.

How to cite: Demuzere, M., Kittner, J., and Bechtel, B.: LCZ Generator: online tool to create Local Climate Zone maps, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11385, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11385, 2021.

EGU21-16076 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Evaluation of shortwave radiation fluxes in the multi-layer SPARTACUS-Urban scheme using DART

Megan Stretton, William Morrison, Robin Hogan, and Sue Grimmond

The heterogenous structure of cities impacts radiative exchanges (e.g. albedo and heat storage). Numerical weather prediction (NWP) models often characterise the urban structure with an infinite street canyon – but this does not capture the three-dimensional urban form. SPARTACUS-Urban (SU) - a fast, multi-layer radiative transfer model designed for NWP - is evaluated using the explicit Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer (DART) model for shortwave fluxes across several model domains – from a regular array of cubes to real cities .

SU agrees with DART (errors < 5.5% for all variables) when the SU assumptions of building distribution are fulfilled (e.g. randomly distribution). For real-world areas with pitched roofs, SU underestimates the albedo (< 10%) and shortwave transmission to the surface (< 15%), and overestimates wall-plus-roof absorption (9-27%), with errors increasing with solar zenith angle. SU should be beneficial to weather and climate models, as it allows more realistic urban form (cf. most schemes) without large increases in computational cost.

How to cite: Stretton, M., Morrison, W., Hogan, R., and Grimmond, S.: Evaluation of shortwave radiation fluxes in the multi-layer SPARTACUS-Urban scheme using DART, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16076, 2021.

EGU21-14071 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Zoning of probability of contagion of COVID 19 and common respiratory diseases aggravated by climatic, environmental and social factors.

André Morales, Fabiola Doracely Yépez Rincón, Hugo Delgado Granados, Victor Manuel Naumovich Velasco Herrera, and Nelly Lucero Ramírez Serrato

Worldwide, there has been an unusual epidemiological phenomenon with the SARS -COV2 virus, which has had important repercussions at the social and economic level and has left the country in a vulnerable situation. From the beginning, various epidemiological mathematical models have been presented that simulate the behavior of the contagion over time, however, these do not contemplate climatic and spatial variables. It is well known that respiratory problems are associated mainly with environmental pollution, sudden changes in temperature or low temperatures, and high humidity content in the environment. Therefore, it is necessary to carry out a quantitative projection of the behavior of the virus in environmental matrices of strategic importance for human health. For this project, a multicriteria analysis was carried out that consists of the conjugation of the different thematic maps related in a categorized way by the level of affectation, divided into five classes, from very low to very high, considering the repercussions and relationship of each of these factors. With respect to the mitigation or spread of respiratory diseases, respectively. For this, 3 scenarios were carried out from a weighted linear sum of the projected levels of affectation under 3 considerations: Climate susceptibility: minimum temperatures, average temperatures, height, and humidity; Environmental susceptibility: with urban mobility, industrial activity, and Social exposure: Population density and marginalization. The result will allow us to obtain a zoning map for the Probability of contagion due to environmental and social conditions at the national level that highlights the population that needs greater mitigation efforts and that can be used freely by the corresponding authorities.

How to cite: Morales, A., Yépez Rincón, F. D., Delgado Granados, H., Velasco Herrera, V. M. N., and Ramírez Serrato, N. L.: Zoning of probability of contagion of COVID 19 and common respiratory diseases aggravated by climatic, environmental and social factors., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14071, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14071, 2021.

EGU21-13431 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Quantifying the impact of urban greenhouse gas emissions for Munich during the COVID-19 pandemic using WRF V3.9.1.1

Xinxu Zhao, Jia Chen, Julia Marshall, Michal Galkowski, Christoph Gerbig, Stephan Hachinger, Johannes Gensheimer, Xiaotian Guo, Florian Dietrich, Adrian Wenzel, and Friedrich Klappenbach

During the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, human activities are strongly restricted, which results in a reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with changes in energy consumptions. The Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) reported a 10.3% decrease in CO2 fossil fuel emissions during the first lockdown (February-July, 2020) of the COVID-19 pandemic throughout Europe. Using our WRF modeling framework built for the Munich area [1,3] and the column measurements from our automated Munich Urban Carbon Column network (MUCCnet, [2]), we aim to quantify the reduction of GHG emissions within Munich during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Our high-resolution modeling framework can simulate the sources, sinks, and emissions of CO2 and CH4 at a spatial resolution of up to 400m. The initial and boundary conditions for meteorological fields are taken from ERA5 and CAMS data is used for initializing the initial and lateral tracer boundary conditions. Anthropogenic emissions below ~1 km altitude above the ground level are obtained from TNO-GHGco v1.1 at a resolution of 1 km2. Various tagged tracers are included to quantify the contribution from different emission categories (such as biogenic emissions from wetlands, emissions from road transport, industry, etc). By refining the vegetation classification using the Dynamic Land Cover map of the Copernicus Global Land Service at 100 m resolution (CGLS-LC100), the urban biogenic signals of CO2 can be well captured using the diagnostic light-use-efficiency biosphere model VPRM (Vegetation Photosynthesis and Respiration Model), which is driven by MODIS indices. Moreover, we integrate urban canopy information derived from World Urban Database and Access Portal Tools (WUDAPT) classified by local climate zones (LCZs) [4] into our model infrastructure. Incorporating precise urban land use data in WRF helps to capture more urban transport features, improving the model behavior within urban areas.

We targeted the pandemic period from February to July 2020 and the same period in 2019 to make a comparison. Thanks to our nearly continuous column measurements during the COVID-19 pandemic, we are able to evaluate our simulated GHG concentrations by comparing them to the measurement results. Furthermore, an estimation of GHG emissions reduction in Munich during the targeted period will be obtained by performing a Bayesian inversion approach incorporating the simulated concentration enhancements from tagged tracers in WRF.

[1] Zhao, X., Chen, J., Marshall, J., Galkowski, M., Gerbig, C., Hachinger, S., Dietrich, F., Lan, L., Knote, C., and van der Gon, H.D., 2020. A semi-operational near-real-time Modelling Infrastructure for assessing GHG emissions in Munich using WRF-GHG. In EGU General Assembly 2020.

[2] Dietrich, F., Chen, J., Voggenreiter, B., Aigner, P., Nachtigall, N., and Reger, B.: Munich permanent urban greenhouse gas column observing network, Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2020-300, in review, 2020.

[3] Zhao, X., Marshall, J., Hachinger, S., Gerbig, C., Frey, M., Hase, F., and Chen, J.: Analysis of total column CO2 and CH4 measurements in Berlin with WRF-GHG, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 19, 11279–11302, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-11279-2019, 2019.

[4] Demuzere, M., Bechtel, B., Middel, A., & Mills, G. (2019). Mapping Europe into local climate zones. PLOS ONE, 14(4), e0214474. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214474.

How to cite: Zhao, X., Chen, J., Marshall, J., Galkowski, M., Gerbig, C., Hachinger, S., Gensheimer, J., Guo, X., Dietrich, F., Wenzel, A., and Klappenbach, F.: Quantifying the impact of urban greenhouse gas emissions for Munich during the COVID-19 pandemic using WRF V3.9.1.1, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13431, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13431, 2021.

Ambient air pollution caused by fine particulate matter (PM) and trace gases is a pressing topic as it affects the vast majority of the world's population, especially in densely populated urban environments. The main sources of ambient air pollution in cities are road traffic, industries and domestic heating. Alongside nitrogen oxides (NOx) and PM, ammonia (NH3) is also a relevant air pollutant due to its role as a precursor of particulate ammonium (NH4+). To examine the temporal patterns and sources of air pollutants, this study used fast-response air quality measurements in combination with highly resolved traffic information in Münster, NW Germany. The temporal dynamics of NOx and the particle number concentration (PN10) were similar to the diurnal and weekly courses of the traffic density. On very short timescales, the real-world peak ratios of NOx and PM ≤ 10 µm diameter (PM10) exceeded the predicted pollutant emission ratios of the Handbook for Emission Factors for Road Transport (HBEFA) by a factor of 6.4 and 2.0, respectively. A relative importance model revealed that light-duty vehicles (LDVs) are the major relative contributor to PN10 (38 %) despite their low abundance (4 %) in the local vehicle fleet.  Diesel and gasoline vehicles contributed similarly to the concentrations of PM10 and PN10, while the impact of gasoline vehicles on the PM1 concentration was greater than that of diesel vehicles by a factor of 4.4. The most recent emission class Euro 6 had the highest influence on PM10. Meteorological parameters explained a large portion of the variations in PM10 and PM1, while meteorology had only a minor influence on PN10. We also studied the short-term temporal dynamics of urban NH3 concentrations, the role of road traffic and agriculture as NH3 sources and the importance of ammonia for secondary particle formation (SPF). The NH3 mixing ratio was rather high (mean: 17 ppb) compared to other urban areas and showed distinct diurnal maxima around 10 a.m. and 9 p.m. The main source for ammonia in Münster was agriculture, but road traffic also contributed through local emissions from vehicle catalysts. NH3 from surrounding agricultural areas accumulated in the nocturnal boundary layer and contributed to SPF in the city center. The size-resolved chemical composition of inorganic ions in PM10 was dominated by NH4+ (8.7 µg m-3), followed by NO3- (3.9 µg m-3), SO42- (1.6 µg m-3) and Cl- (1.3 µg m-3). Particles in the accumulation range (diameter: 0.1 – 1 µm) showed the highest inorganic ion concentrations. The ammonium neutralization index J (111 %) indicated an excess of NH4+ leading to mostly alkaline PM. High ammonia emissions from surrounding agricultural areas combined with large amounts of NOx from road traffic play a crucial role for SPF in Münster. Our results further indicate that replacing fossil-fuelled LDVs with electrical vehicles would greatly reduce the PN10 concentrations at this urban site.

How to cite: Ehrnsperger, L. and Klemm, O.: Air pollution in an urban street canyon: Novel insights from highly resolved traffic information and meteorology, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15830, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15830, 2021.

EGU21-16119 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Integrating the Urban Canopy Layer in a Lagrangian Particle Dispersion Model

Stefan Stöckl, Mathias W. Rotach, and Natascha Kljun

Traditional Lagrangian particle dispersion models reflect particles at the zero-plane displacement height and therefore cannot properly take near-ground effects into account. In this study, we investigate whether including the urban canopy layer improves the performance of such a Lagrangian particle dispersion model. Here, spatially averaged flow and turbulence profiles throughout the urban canopy are constructed based on data from the literature (mostly from wind tunnel and numerical modeling studies).

We apply a first-order approach to test to what degree the explicit inclusion of the urban canopy changes the simulated concentration distributions. In a comprehensive sensitivity study, we show that most of the parameters introduced to describe the turbulence and flow profiles in the canopy have a relatively minor impact on the dispersion (and hence concentration distribution) – despite their inherent uncertainty. In particular, concentration fields are more sensitive to previously existing parameters of the model. One exception is a parameter describing the mean canopy wind speed profile, to which the model is sensitive.

When compared to data from the BUBBLE tracer experiment, the results show that the inclusion of the urban canopy layer slightly improves the modelled concentration values. The improvement is minor and might likely differ when comparing with other field experiments. However, the key point here is that the increased complexity and added capability of near-ground concentration simulation did not fundamentally change the model performance.

Ultimately, inclusion of the urban canopy layer will allow the model to be used as the dispersion core for an urban footprint model with footprint estimates near the ground.

How to cite: Stöckl, S., Rotach, M. W., and Kljun, N.: Integrating the Urban Canopy Layer in a Lagrangian Particle Dispersion Model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16119, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16119, 2021.

EGU21-15472 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Distributed urban drag parameterization in the sub-kilometre scale London Model

Birgit Sützl, Gabriel Rooney, Anke Finnenkoetter, Sylvia Bohnenstengel, Sue Grimmond, and Maarten van Reeuwijk

Urban environments in numerical weather prediction models are currently parameterised as part of the atmosphere-surface exchange at ground-level. The vertical structure of buildings is represented by the average height, which does not account for heterogeneous building forms at the subgrid-level. The use of city-scale models with sub-kilometre resolutions and growing number of high-rise buildings in cities call for a better vertical representation of urban environments.

We present the use of a newly developed, height-distributed urban drag parameterization with the London Model, a high-resolution version of the Met Office Unified Model over Greater London and surroundings at approximately 333 m resolution. The distributed drag parameterization requires vertical morphology profiles in form of height-distributed frontal area functions, which capture the full extent and variability of building-heights. These morphology profiles were calculated for Greater London and parameterised by an exponential distribution with the ratio of maximum to mean building-height as parameter.

A case study with the high-resolution London Model and the new drag parameterization appears to capture more realistic features of the urban boundary layer compared to the standard parameterization. The simulation showed increased horizontal spatial variability in total surface stress, identifying a broad range of morphology features (densely built-up areas, high-rise building clusters, parks and the river). Vertical effects include heterogeneous wind profiles, extended building wakes, and indicate the formation of internal boundary layers. This study demonstrates the potential of height-distributed urban parameterizations to improve urban weather forecasting, albeit research into distribution of heat- and moisture-exchange is necessary for a fully distributed parameterization of urban areas.

How to cite: Sützl, B., Rooney, G., Finnenkoetter, A., Bohnenstengel, S., Grimmond, S., and van Reeuwijk, M.: Distributed urban drag parameterization in the sub-kilometre scale London Model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15472, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15472, 2021.

EGU21-15657 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urbanization of Weather Forecast, Air-Quality Prediction and Climate Scenarios - Project URBI PRAGENSI

Tomas Halenka, Michal Belda, Peter Huszar, Jan Karlicky, and Tereza Novakova

The ratio of population living in cities is growing and this is especially true for the largest ones, megacities. However, even smaller cities like the City of Prague  (about 1.5 M) can suffer significantly and the night time temperature difference under summer heat wave can achieve more than 5°C. To assess the impact of cities and urban structures on weather, climate and air-quality, modelling approach is commonly used and the inclusion of urban parameterization in land-surface interactions is of primary importance to capture the urban effects properly. This is especially important when going to higher resolution, which is common trend in operational weather forecast, air-quality prediction as well as regional climate modeling. This represents the rapidly developing research, motivated by specific risks in urban environment, with strong impacts on vulnerable communities there, leading to the tools to assess properly impacts within the cities and the effectiveness of adaptation and mitigation options applied there by the city authorities. Under the action towards the Smart Cities and within the framework for developing adequate climate services, such supporting tools for decission making are inevitable. It is valid not only for extreme heat waves impact prediction, but as well in air-quality forecast and in long term perspective in connection to climate change impacts assessment. This provides the background for the project within Operational Program Prague - The Pole of Growth “Urbanization of weather forecast, air-quality prediction and climate scenarios for Prague”, shortly URBI PRAGENSI.

 

There are four main tasks within the project. First, urbanization of weather forecast, i.e. involving and testing the urban parameterization scheme in the weather prediction model can provide in very high resolution localized weather prediction and especially under the heat wave condition it can well capture the temperature differences in the city center with respect to the remote areas. There are applications, which can use such localized prediction for planning and decision making on e.g. public services for some specific groups of population in risks. Further, air-quality forecast based on such urbanized weather condition forecast can benefit from better estimates of temperature for chemical reactions, mixing height for dispersion conditions etc. Third, urbanized scenarios of climate change can provide better description of future conditions in the city for adaptation and mitigation options, moreover, in connection to urban heat island urbanized regional climate model in very high resolution is good tool for estimates of efficiency  of potential adaptation or mitigation measures which might be applied by the city administration. Last, but not least, microscale simulations using LES methods are supposed to be used for selected local hot-spots to solve them.

How to cite: Halenka, T., Belda, M., Huszar, P., Karlicky, J., and Novakova, T.: Urbanization of Weather Forecast, Air-Quality Prediction and Climate Scenarios - Project URBI PRAGENSI, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15657, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15657, 2021.

EGU21-16001 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urban weather generation: the intercomparison of three emerging models

Csilla Gal

Cities modify the background climate through the surface-atmosphere interaction. This modification is function of urban design features, such as the configuration of buildings and the amount of vegetation. Compared to the undisturbed climate of the region, the climate of cities is characterized by higher temperature and lower wind speed. This modification is especially pronounce in dense urban areas. The climate modification of cities is not static, but varies in space and time. The spatial variations are governed by land use and built form differences, as well as by the presence or absence of green and blue infrastructures. Due to the spatial complexity of cities and the general lack of urban weather station networks in most places, the amount of available urban weather data is limited. As a consequence, planners, engineers and public health professionals can only approximate the climate impact of built environments in their respective fields.

Over the past years, several numerical simulation models have emerged that are able to model the influence of built areas on the atmosphere at the local scale and thus, deliver urban weather data for an area of interest. The aim of this study is to assess the performance of three numerical models with an ability to predict site-specific urban air temperature. The evaluated models are the Urban Weather Generator (UWG), the Vertical City Weather Generator (VCWG) and the Surface Urban Energy and Water Balance Scheme (SUEWS). Although the models differ in their scopes, modeling approaches and applications, they all derive the urban weather data from rural observations considering the land use and built form characteristics of the site.

The models are evaluated against air temperature measurements from the dense, 13th District of Budapest (Hungary). The field measurement utilized simple air temperature and relative humidity loggers placed in non-aspirated solar radiation screens at four shaded sites. The two week measurement period encompassed a five-day-long anticyclonic period with clear sky and low wind speed. Preliminary results indicate a good general agreement between modeled and observed values with root mean square error below or at 2ºC and index of agreement between 0.92-0.96. During the anticyclonic period most models slightly overestimate the daily maximum and underestimated the daily minimum urban air temperature.

How to cite: Gal, C.: Urban weather generation: the intercomparison of three emerging models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16001, 2021.

EGU21-12563 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Innovative urban climate model PALM-4U as a support tool for municipal climate adaptation strategies.

Antonina Kriuger, Alexander Reinbold, Martina Schubert-Frisius, and Jörg Cortekar

Cities are particularly vulnerable to climate change. At the same time, cities change slowly. Accordingly, preparatory measures to adapt to climate change have to be taken urgently. High-performance urban climate models with various applications can form the basis for prospective planning decisions, however, as of today no such model exists that can be easily applied outside of the scientific community. Therefore, the funding program Urban Climate Under Change [UC]2 aims to further develop the new urban climate model PALM-4U (Parallelized Large-Eddy Simulation Model for Urban Applications) into a practice-oriented and user-friendly product that meets the needs of municipalities and other practical users in addition to scientific research.

Specifically, the high-performance model PALM-4U allows simulation of entire large cities comprising the area over 1.000 km2 with a grid size of down to few meters. One of our goals within the project ProPolis is to design and test the practical implementation of PALM-4U in standard and innovative application fields which include thermal comfort (indices like PT, PET, UTCI), cold air balance (source areas, reach and others), local wind comfort (indices derived from medium winds and gusts) as well as dispersion of pollutants.

In close cooperation with our practice partners, we explore the potential of PALM-4U to support the urban planning processes in each specific application setting. Additionally, with development of the fit for purpose graphic user interface, manuals and trainings we aim to enable practitioners to apply the model for their individual planning questions and adaptation measures.

In our presentation, we will show an application case of PALM-4U in a major German city. We will investigate the effect of a planned development area on the local climate and the impact of different climate change adaptation measures (such as extensive vs. intensive green roofs). The comparative simulations of the current state and planning scenarios with integrated green and blue infrastructure should provide arguments for the municipal decision making in consideration of climate change aspects in a densely built-up environment, e.g. urban heat stress.

How to cite: Kriuger, A., Reinbold, A., Schubert-Frisius, M., and Cortekar, J.: Innovative urban climate model PALM-4U as a support tool for municipal climate adaptation strategies., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12563, 2021.

EGU21-13503 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Using an Urban Building Energy Modelling Towards a Carbon-Neutral Neighbourhood: A case study of Dublin Ireland

Niall Buckley, Gerald Mill s, and Christoph Reinhart

The EU’s Green Deal has a goal of a climate-neutral Europe by 2050. Achieving this goal will require a comprehensive set of actions across all economic sectors, especially the building sector, which currently accounts for 40% of the energy consumed.  Residential energy use is a significant contributor, much of it due to the poorly insulated building stock. Making a ‘just transition’ to more energy-efficient cities requires a spatial approach that can address the correspondence of poor housing and people and the potential for energy innovation at a neighbourhood-scale. In this study, a geographic database of building archetypes is developed for use by the Urban Modelling Interface (Umi) to perform simulations of urban energy use intensity and test the efficacy of energy policies. Umi is applied to a neighbourhood of residential buildings in Dublin (Ireland), many of which perform poorly. Simulated annual energy use intensity is evaluated favourably using energy performance certificate data. Umi is used subsequently to design and test the efficacy of district-level energy policies; the results indicate that the most cost-effective mix of envelope retrofit and onsite energy production to achieve the Green Deal’s target of 60% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and 100% by 2050. The methodology shown here employs data and software that is publicly available for many EU countries.

How to cite: Buckley, N., Mill s, G., and Reinhart, C.: Using an Urban Building Energy Modelling Towards a Carbon-Neutral Neighbourhood: A case study of Dublin Ireland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13503, 2021.

EGU21-16430 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

High resolution air temperature maps for urban planning and management

Giuseppe Frustaci, Enea Montoli, Cristina Lavecchia, and Samantha Pilati

Existence of more or less dense urban meteorological networks is nowadays relatively common, even if often heterogenous in scopes, hardware and management. Those networks are undoubtedly useful tools for a variety of practical purposes.  Nevertheless, they are generally unfit to climatological studies, and unable to describe Air Temperature in the Urban Canopy Layer (UCL) with sufficient spatial resolution: for example, as required by several professional activities and for local adaptation measures to climate change.

 On the other hand, remote sensing data from space has become more and more frequent and easily available, offering a higher spatial resolution (but a still very low frequency) of surface characteristics as the Land Surface Temperature (LST). Often used to describe Urban Heat Islands (UHI), LST has not a simple correlation with canopy layer Air Temperature, which on the contrary is the most required variable for planning and management purposes in cities.

 Using both high quality in situ measurements of Air Temperature at top of UCL obtained by a dedicated urban network as a primary variable, and satellite derived LSTs as the secondary one, a Co-Kriging based methodology has been developed and tested to obtain medium to high spatial resolution Air Temperature maps. Instantaneous as well as long period mean fields of fine spatially resolved Air Temperature find relevant application not only in monitoring and assessing activities of adaptation and mitigation measures in the urban environment, but also in urban climate studies.

 In this paper the methodology is shortly described, and results for the metropolitan area of Milan and the neighbourhoods, obtained in the framework of the first 2 years of ClimaMi Project (https://www.progettoclimami.it/), are presented and discussed together with error estimations.

How to cite: Frustaci, G., Montoli, E., Lavecchia, C., and Pilati, S.: High resolution air temperature maps for urban planning and management, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16430, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16430, 2021.

The urban heat island (UHI) is mostly due to urbanization and it is considered as a nocturnal phenomenon, but it also appears during the day in Mexico City. The UHI in concert with the high temperatures caused by global climate change (CC) may profoundly affect human thermal comfort, which can influence human productivity and morbidity in the spring/summer period. Obesity is a disease manifested by the accumulation of excess body fat with implications for the health of people, and Mexico ranks first in overweight and obesity, where 30% of the population has obesity and near 40% is overweight. The main objective of this investigation was to determine the changes in the degree of thermal comfort of Mexico City inhabitants according to their nutritional status, because of the increase in temperatures due UHI and CC. A series of microclimatological measurements to estimate the physiologically equivalent temperature (PET) were made. Concomitantly, a series of surveys of thermal perception were applied to 1300 passersby. The results show that PET has increased from 1990 to 2010 from 0.0372 °C/year to 0.0887 °C/year in the study sites, besides overestimating the degree of thermal comfort of people with normal weight but underestimating that of overweight and obese people according to the stablished categories or classes. It is concluded that it is imperative that people with overweight and obesity reduce their weight but also should be investigated that influences the unbalanced consumption of food. It is also imperative to mitigate UHI and CC through urban architectural techniques.

How to cite: Barradas, V. L. and Ballinas, M.: Implications of the urban heat island and global climate change and nutritional status on the human thermal comfort in Mexico City, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-965, 2021.

EGU21-16146 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

A comparative study of urban heat island effects in two Belarusian cities from satellite and ground-based observations

Heorhi Burchanka, Yahor Prakopchyk, Tsimafei Schlender, Aleh Baravik, and Siarhei Barodka

This study is devoted to analysis of urban development effects on surface thermal characteristics for the case of Belarusian cities of Minsk and Mahiloŭ. Both cities being situated on the same latitude (53.90 N) and not far from each other (~180 km distance), while also sharing a number of similar features typical for cities in Belarus (and in some other former Eastern Bloc countries as well), Minsk and Mahiloŭ nevertheless differ significantly in terms of their population, size and structure. It is therefore of interest to perform urban climate studies for these two cities in parallel.

First, we use geoinformation systems (QGIS), centralized city planning databases and Open Street Maps (OSM) vector data to implement description of Minsk and Mahiloŭ urban territories in terms of functional zones, taking into account such features as buildings density and urban area category (industrial, residential, business, recreational and other types).

Furthermore, we perform analysis of surface temperature fields for both cities from satellite data (Landsat-8) and ground-based observations, the latter including both regular meteorological stations (in urban as well as surrounding rural areas) and a volunteer network of weather and air quality sensors distributed in both cities as part of the AirMQ project [1]. We analyze observations for several months in the 2019-2021 period (depending on data availability), paying special attention to days with specific weather conditions (e.g. blocking anticyclones).

Analysis demonstrates clear evidence of significant urban heat island effects in thermal regimes of both cities, with specific areas of increased temperature related to urban zoning, industrial and green areas, buildings heights and density. However, the selected method of surface urban heat island (SUHI) detection turns out to be somewhat limited for the purposes of studying the effects of blocking anticyclones on urban heat island phenomena development, thereby calling for application of atmospheric numerical modelling techniques.

[1] AirMQ project, URL: https://airmq.by/

How to cite: Burchanka, H., Prakopchyk, Y., Schlender, T., Baravik, A., and Barodka, S.: A comparative study of urban heat island effects in two Belarusian cities from satellite and ground-based observations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16146, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16146, 2021.

EGU21-12682 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Assessing heat wave mitigation strategies in a Mediterranean coastal city: how effective are cool roofs and urban green? 

Sergi Ventura, Alba Badia, Ricard Segura, Joan Gilabert, Carme Llasat, Alberto Martilli, and Gara Villalba

Heat waves (HW) are expected to become more frequent and intense in urban areas, where currently 54% of the population resides (United Nations, 2018) and 60% are expected to do so by 2030. Urban policy makers are proposing various mitigation strategies, but currently lack the tools to determine how effective they will be in terms of the city´s geography climate and urban morphology. We use the Weather and Research Forecasting Model (WRF)  with the multi-layer Urban Scheme Building Effect Parametrization (BEP) and Building Energy Model (BEP+BEM) (Martilli et al., 2002), to simulate three scenarios proposed by the Urban Master Plan of the Metropolitan Area of Barcelona (AMB) for potential implementation. We include detailed input data using cartography at 10 m resolution and eleven urban classes.  We simulate a HW episode that occurred in July-August 2015 when temperatures reached 40°C during the day and did not go below 25°C at night, for more than five consecutive days. The three potential scenarios simulated are: 1) Increasing the albedo of rooftops to 0.85 for certain urban classes, 2) Increasing the urban green by an additional 255.64 ha according to the proposal of the Master Urban Plan for 2030 with two different irrigation schemes and 3) a combination of these two complementary mitigation strategies. We find that the cool roofs reduce temperatures best during the day (average reductions of 2.22°C), while the additional green areas help moderate temperatures evenly during the day and nighttime (average reductions of 0.15°C and 0.17°C, respectively). However, when irrigation is increased from 2 to 5L/m2day, the temperature reduction potential during the day is intensified due to the cooling effect of more evapotranspiration. The thermal regulation potential of the combined scenario is the most propagated over the AMB and has the highest impact with average daytime reductions of 1.26°C and maximum reduction of 4.73°C at 13:00 UTC.

How to cite: Ventura, S., Badia, A., Segura, R., Gilabert, J., Llasat, C., Martilli, A., and Villalba, G.: Assessing heat wave mitigation strategies in a Mediterranean coastal city: how effective are cool roofs and urban green? , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12682, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12682, 2021.

EGU21-14143 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Automated detection of urban heat islands based on satellite imagery, digital surface models, and a low-cost sensor network                                     

Sebastian Schlögl, Nico Bader, Julien Gérard Anet, Martin Frey, Curdin Spirig, Manuel Renold, and Karl Gutbrod

Today, more than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas and the proportion is projected to increase further in the near future. The increased number of heatwaves worldwide caused by the anthropogenic climate change may lead to heat stress and significant economic and ecological damages. Therefore, the growth of urban areas in combination with climate change can increase future mortality rates in cities, given that cities are more vulnerable to heatwaves due to the greater heat storage capacity of artificial surfaces towards higher longwave radiation fluxes.

To detect urban heat islands and resolve the micro-scale air temperature field in an urban environment, a low-cost air temperature network, including 450 sensors, was installed in the Swiss cities of Zurich and Basel in 2019 and 2020. These air temperature data, complemented with further official measurement stations, force a statistical air temperature downscaling model for urban environments, which is used operationally to calculate hourly micro-scale air temperatures in 10 m horizontal resolution. In addition to air temperature measurements from the low-cost sensor network, the model is further forced by albedo, NDVI, and NDBI values generated from the polar-orbiting satellite Sentinel-2, land surface temperatures estimated from Landsat-8, and high-resolution digital surface and elevation models.

Urban heat islands (UHI) are processed averaging hourly air temperatures over an entire year for each grid point, and comparing this average to the overall average in rural areas. UHI effects can then be correlated to high-resolution local climate zone maps and other local factors.

Between 60-80 % of the urban area is modeled with an accuracy below 1 K for an hourly time step indicating that the approach may work well in different cities. However, the outcome may depend on the complexity of the cities. The model error decreases rapidly by increasing the number of spatially distributed sensor data used to train the model, from 0 to 70 sensors, and then plateaus with further increases. An accuracy below 1 K can be expected for more than 50 air temperature measurements within the investigated cities and the surrounding rural areas. 

A strong statistical air temperature model coupled with atmospheric boundary layer models (e.g. PALM-4U, MUKLIMO, FITNAH) will aid to generate highly resolved urban heat island prediction maps that help decision-makers to identify local heat islands easier. This will ensure that financial resources will be invested as efficiently as possible in mitigation actions.

How to cite: Schlögl, S., Bader, N., Anet, J. G., Frey, M., Spirig, C., Renold, M., and Gutbrod, K.: Automated detection of urban heat islands based on satellite imagery, digital surface models, and a low-cost sensor network                                     , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14143, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14143, 2021.

EGU21-14913 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Statistical modeling of fire brigade operations with respect to extreme precipitation events over Berlin

Alexander Pasternack, Ines Langer, Henning W. Rust, and Uwe Ulbrich

Large cities and urban regions are highly sensitive to impacts caused by extreme events (e.g. heavy rainfall). As problems caused by hazardous atmospheric events are expected to intensify due to the Anthropogenic Climate Change, adequate adaptation planning of urban infrastructure is needed. Planning adaptations not only requires further research on potential impacts under changing climate conditions as a basis, but also a check of the practical feasibility for stakeholders.

Under the BMBF research program “Urban Climate Under Change” ([UC]²), we relate heavy precipitation events over Berlin to the respective fire brigade operations. Here, the precipitation data are based on temporally high resolved radar data. The fire brigade operation data are available on time and location, but the number of recorded events is small, and their distribution is highly overdispersive compared to a Poisson model. To account for this problem we apply a two part hurdle model with one part modeling the probability of the occurrence of fire brigade operations and one part modeling the actual number of operations given that at least one operation occurs. In the corresponding statistical models the parameters of the distributions are described by additive predictors, which are based on precipitation duration and intensity as well as building density. Based on 10 years of data with a cross validation setup, both the occurrence model and the model for the number of operations significantly outperform the reference climatology for certain areas over Berlin.

How to cite: Pasternack, A., Langer, I., Rust, H. W., and Ulbrich, U.: Statistical modeling of fire brigade operations with respect to extreme precipitation events over Berlin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14913, 2021.

EGU21-5993 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

A seasonal assessment of urban outdoor thermal exposure in a humid continental climate using the MaRTy observational platform

Tim Aiello, Scott Krayenhoff, Ariane Middel, and Jon Warland

Many cities in the northern hemisphere experience both extreme heat and extreme cold weather. Pedestrians are exposed to these thermal extremes, causing bodily stress. With a growing and ageing urban population, city design that contributes to the mitigation of summer heat exposure while also reducing winter cold exposure is of increasing importance. Pedestrian thermal exposure depends on several microclimatic factors in addition to air temperature, including wind speed, humidity, as well as shortwave and longwave radiation, which can be quantified by the mean radiant temperature (Tmrt). There has been little study of the impacts on pedestrian thermal exposure in climates with high humidity during summer and snow cover in the winter. We gathered seasonal radiation data from varied urban microclimates using the six-directional Tmrt method in a Canadian city. We deployed a mobile human-biometeorological weather station (MaRTy cart), which has previously been used primarily in hot, dry climates. Tmrt profiles are decomposed into their directional components, and they demonstrate substantial differences in the drivers of thermal exposure between seasons and locations within the city.

How to cite: Aiello, T., Krayenhoff, S., Middel, A., and Warland, J.: A seasonal assessment of urban outdoor thermal exposure in a humid continental climate using the MaRTy observational platform, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5993, 2021.

EGU21-13237 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Application and performance of Kestrel sensors for assessing thermal comfort in outdoor built environments

Lisette Klok, Erica Caverzam Barbosa, Luc van Zandbrink, and Jeroen Kluck

In face of climate change and urbanization, the need for thermally comfortable outdoor urban spaces is increasing. In the design of the thermally comfortable urban spaces and decision making about interventions that enhance thermal comfort, scientists and professionals that work for cities use meteorological measurements and models. These measurements can be done by professional and accurate meteorological sensors, but also by simpler mobile instruments such as the easy-to-use Kestrel weather meters. In using these simple type of sensors, it is important to know what the performance of these sensors is for outdoor thermal comfort assessments and how they can be used by scientists and professionals in decision making about urban designs that enhance thermal comfort.

To answer these questions, we carried out three experiments in the summer of 2020 in Amsterdam, in which we tested the 11 Kestrel 5400 heat stress sensors and assessed the performance of this equipment for thermal comfort studies. We concluded that Kestrel sensors can be used very well for assessing differences in air temperature and PET (Physiological Equivalent Temperature) between outdoor built environments. For both air temperature and PET, the RMSE between the 11 Kestrel sensors was 0.5 °C maximum when measuring the same conditions. However, Kestrel sensors that were placed in the sun without a wind vane mounted to the equipment showed large radiation errors. In this case, temperature differences up to 3.4 °C were observed compared to Kestrels that were shaded. The effect of a higher air temperature on the PET calculation is, however, surprisingly small. A sensitivity analysis showed that an increase of 3 °C in the air temperature results in a maximal PET reduction of 0.5 °C. We concluded that Kestrel sensors can very well be used for assessing differences between air temperatures and PET between two locations and assessing the thermal effects of urban designs, but care should be taken when air temperature measurements are carried out in the sun. We always recommend using the wind vanes to deviate from high radiant input orientations for the temperature sensor, and placing the stations next to each other at the beginning and at the end of the measurements to check whether the stations actually measure the same values. Any differences can be corrected afterwards.

How to cite: Klok, L., Caverzam Barbosa, E., van Zandbrink, L., and Kluck, J.: Application and performance of Kestrel sensors for assessing thermal comfort in outdoor built environments, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13237, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13237, 2021.

EGU21-15837 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Urban surface temperature observations from ground-based thermography: intra- and inter-facet variability

William Morrison, Simone Kotthaus, and Sue Grimmond

In this study (Morrison et al., 2021) ground based thermal cameras are used to observe urban surface temperatures (Ts) with an unprecedented combination of: temporal and spatial resolution (5 min and ~ 0.5 m → 2.5 m), spatial extent (3.9 ha), instrument number (6 static cameras) and surface heterogeneity (mixed high rise and vegetation). The camera images are classified by geometry and material properties (surface orientation, albedo, solar irradiance, and shadow history). Unlike previous methods, pixels are objectively classified using sensor view modelling and a detailed three-dimensional surface model (430 m × 430 m extent). From detailed source area analysis, the cameras are shown to observe 9.5% of the study area. Across all camera pixels, the 5th - 95th percentile Ts range is 37.5 K around midday. Roofs Ts has the greatest diurnal range (290.6 K → 329.0 K). Ts differences across sloped roofs with different sun-surface geomeetry reach 23.3 K. Walls of different cardinal orientations consistently differ by >10 K between 10:00 and 15:00. High temporal resolution (5 min) shadow tracking from the classified images is used to model cooling rates, where recently shaded (<30 min) ground can be 18.6 K warmer than equivalent unshaded Ts. West walls remain warm past sunset and are 1.2 K warmer than north walls at 23:00 (~4 h after sunset). Recently shaded walls cool exponentially to ambient Ts at a similar rate as the ground, but four times slower than roofs. The observaiton methods and observed Ts characteristics are anticipated to have a wide range of applications (e.g. informing future ground-based thermogragy campaign setups, evaluation of urban surface energy balance models, ground-truthing of satellite thermal remote sensing).

 

Morrison, W., Kotthaus, S. and Grimmond, S. (2021) ‘Urban surface temperature observations from ground-based thermography: intra- and inter-facet variability’, Urban Climate, 35, p. 100748. doi: 10.1016/j.uclim.2020.100748.

 

How to cite: Morrison, W., Kotthaus, S., and Grimmond, S.: Urban surface temperature observations from ground-based thermography: intra- and inter-facet variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15837, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15837, 2021.

EGU21-6079 | vPICO presentations | CL2.2

Estimating urban sensible heat flux using satellite-based data

Gabriel Rios and Prathap Ramamurthy

A model for calculating sensible heat flux (QH) – a primary component of the urban surface energy budget - is presented here. Remote sensing data from the NOAA GOES-16 satellite and a high-resolution land cover dataset are used as inputs to calculate the spatio-temporal variability in urban sensible heat flux. The primary motivation for this model is to present a cost-effective approach to calculate QH independent of traditional flux observations and computational methods. The GOES-16 satellite data, which has a moderate spatial and high temporal resolution (2 km square at 5 minute intervals) enables the estimation of QH over highly heterogeneous urban areas. The model is constructed using an iterative algorithm that uses surface layer turbulence parameterization to solve for QH as a function of the enterprise GOES-16 Land Surface Temperature product, an urban air temperature model, publicly-accessible ground observations, and the National Land Cover Database (NLCD). Preliminary model validation was performed over a five-month period in 2019. Three (3) ground flux stations in the New York City metro area with varying degrees of urbanization were used for model validation. Statistics from validation found an RMSE of 42.9 W-m-2, a mean bias of 12.9 W-m-2, and an R2 of 0.80. Validation results demonstrate that the algorithm shows good correlation with observed values, suggesting that satellite data can be used as an accessible and cost-effective option to estimate QH in urban areas.

How to cite: Rios, G. and Ramamurthy, P.: Estimating urban sensible heat flux using satellite-based data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6079, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6079, 2021.

CL2.3 – Synoptic climatology: methods and applications

EGU21-7973 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Transition probabilities between synoptic weather types as a fingerprint for climate model evaluation

Juan Antonio Fernandez-Granja, Ana Casanueva, Joaquín Bedia, and Jesús Fernández

Global Climate Models (GCMs) generally exhibit significant biases in the representation of large-scale atmospheric circulation. Even after bias adjustment, these errors remain and are inherited to some extent by the derived downscaling products, impairing the credibility of future regional projections. 

We perform a process-based evaluation of state-of-the-art GCMs from CMIP5 and CMIP6, with a focus on the simulation of the synoptic climatological patterns having a most prominent effect on the European climate. To this aim, we use the Lamb Weather Type Classification (LWT, Lamb, 1972). We undertake a comprehensive assessment based on several evaluation measures, such as Kullback-Leibler divergence (KL), Relative Bias and Transition Probability Matrix Score (TPMS), used to assess the ability of the GCMs in reproducing not only the frequencies of the different Lamb Weather Types (LWTs), but also the daily probabilities of transitions among them. We show that the novel TPMS score poses a stringent test on the GCM performance, allowing for a convenient model ranking based on each model’s transition probability matrix fingerprint. Deficiencies in the transition probabilities from one LWT to another might explain the misrepresentation of the synoptic conditions and their frequencies by the GCMs. Four different reanalysis products of varying characteristics are considered as pseudo-observational reference in order to assess observational uncertainty. 

Our results unveil an overall improvement of salient atmospheric circulation features of CMIP6 with respect to CMIP5, demonstrating the ability of the new models to better capture key synoptic conditions. The improvement is consistent across observational references, although it is uneven across models and large frequency biases still remain for the dominant LWTs in many cases. In particular, some CMIP6 models attain similar or even worse results than their CMIP5 counterparts. In light of the large differences found across models, we advocate for a careful selection of driving GCMs in downscaling experiments with a special focus on large-scale atmospheric circulation aspects.

 

How to cite: Fernandez-Granja, J. A., Casanueva, A., Bedia, J., and Fernández, J.: Transition probabilities between synoptic weather types as a fingerprint for climate model evaluation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7973, 2021.

Circulation classifications are a simple tool given their ability to portray aspects of day-to-day weather. As we start facing a dynamical response in general circulation patterns due to anthropogenic global warming, circulation changes can enhance or mitigate regional and local behaviour of extreme weather events.

An automatic weather type (WT) classification, developed by Jenkinson-Collison, is used to evaluate past and future changes in seasonal frequencies of synoptic weather patterns over central and western Europe. A set of three reanalyses and eight Global Climate Models (GCMs) from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) are used, based on daily Sea Level Pressure (SLP) data.

Discrepancies are found in some of the model outputs as some fall short of capturing interannual variabilities when compared to reanalyses. Cyclonic and westerly circulations tend to be overestimated, whereas anticyclonic are underestimated.

Based on the historical data and Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 5 (SSP5-8.5) scenario, the evaluated trends suggest more robust signals during the summer half-years given their lesser synoptic-scale variability. During this season, increasing frequencies are found for the WT characterized by weak pressure gradients, mostly at the expense of decreasing frequencies of the westerlies. Our findings indicate that the time of emergence of these signals only occurs towards the end of the 21st century, even in such a high-emission scenario.

How to cite: Herrera-Lormendez, P., Matschullat, J., and Douville, H.: Past and future trends in large-scale atmospheric circulations over Europe: Assessment of the Jenkinson-Collison classification with reanalyses and CMIP6, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3150, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3150, 2021.

EGU21-2087 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Non-Stationarity of Wintertime Atmospheric Circulation Regimes in the Euro-Atlantic Sector

Swinda Falkena, Jana de Wiljes, Antje Weisheimer, and Ted Shepherd

Atmospheric circulation regimes can be used to study links between regional weather and other climate processes, like sudden stratospheric warmings. For these studies it is important to know whether there is any background non-stationarity in the regimes themselves. To identify regime non-stationarity model ensemble data is needed to have sufficient data. However, models are noisy in their representation of circulation regimes making obtaining the signal difficult. We propose a new method, in the form of a constraint on the ensemble-member similarity in the clustering method, to identify the signal of the non-stationary regime dynamics.

We use ECMWF SEAS5 hindcast data to identify six wintertime circulation regimes over the Euro-Atlantic sector (NAO+/-, Atlantic Ridge (AR) +/- and Scandinavian Blocking (SB) +/-), which has been found to be the optimal number of regimes in a previous study. Implementing the constraint leads to more robust regimes and the identification of a stronger inter-annual signal in the regime occurrence rates than without the constraint. The clearest signal on inter-annual timescales is found during strong El Niño years. During those years the NAO+ becomes less frequent, while the SB- occurs more often. The signal in the occurrence rate of the NAO- is weaker than for the NAO+. Without the implementation of the constraint this difference in the strength of the signal between the two phases of the NAO cannot be detected. Thus, the constraint on the ensemble-member similarity allows for identifying a non-stationary signal that otherwise is more difficult to obtain.

How to cite: Falkena, S., de Wiljes, J., Weisheimer, A., and Shepherd, T.: Non-Stationarity of Wintertime Atmospheric Circulation Regimes in the Euro-Atlantic Sector, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2087, 2021.

EGU21-5656 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Coastal lows climatology along the Chilean coast using ERA5 reanalysis

Álvaro Gómez Contreras, Natalia Carrera Ávila, María Jesús Rapanague, and Roberto Rondanelli Rojas

Coastal lows are prevalent along the coast of Chile. They are thermal lows that propagate poleward. The leading edge of the coastal low is associated with easterly winds, warm surface temperatures and clear skies. They are forced by the reversal of the typical meridional pressure gradient by the passage of synoptic scale high pressure systems embedded in the extratropical storm track. Coastal lows are an important feature of Southwestern South America, as they are involved in some of the major air pollution episodes in Central Chile, as well as are a factor in summertime bushfire events. Similar coastally trapped disturbances occur in Southeastern Australia, South Africa and the west coast of North America.

In this work, we characterize the climatology of coastal lows in Chile using surface pressure, wind and geopotential height at 500 hPa from the ERA5 reanalysis (1979 to 2018). These high resolution fields allow, for the first time, to characterize the behavior of coastal lows in the mesoscale, which were only coarsely represented in previous reanalyses. We identify the events using a method based on the drop of surface pressure and winds from the associated coastal low level jet. We found an average of 39 events per year, developing mostly during winter and spring. We found that the coastal low demise occurs typically at around 19:00 Local Time. We also characterize the propagation speed of the low along the coast finding a very striking change from about 40 m/s north of 30ºS to about 17 m/s south of 30ºS. We will discuss our findings in the light of dynamical theories proposed for the propagation of these disturbances.

How to cite: Gómez Contreras, Á., Carrera Ávila, N., Rapanague, M. J., and Rondanelli Rojas, R.: Coastal lows climatology along the Chilean coast using ERA5 reanalysis, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5656, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5656, 2021.

EGU21-7703 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Different cyclone characteristics along the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio SST front regions

Leonidas Tsopouridis, Clemens Spensberger, and Thomas Spengler

The Northwest Atlantic and the Northwest Pacific are regions of strong temperature gradients and hence favourable locations for wintertime cyclone intensification co‐located with the storm tracks. Although the Gulf Stream and the Kuroshio Extension are both western boundary currents with similar characteristics, the SST gradient is markedly stronger across the Gulf Stream. Further, upper-level flow is stronger and more zonal over the Kuroshio Extension. To estimate the relative contribution of the SST front to the evolution of cyclones and to identify the mechanisms for cyclone intensification in the two regions, we track individual cyclones and categorise them depending on their propagation relative to the SST front. We focus on cyclones staying either on the cold (C1) or warm (C2) side of the SST front, and on cyclones that cross the SST front from the warm to the cold side (C3).  Comparing these categories, we find that low-level baroclinicity, particularly arising from the land–sea contrast, drives the higher intensification of cyclones in C1 and C3 in the Gulf Stream region, with the propagation of those cyclones near the left exit region of the North Atlantic jet contributing to the higher intensification and precipitation. In the Kuroshio region on the other hand, the land–sea contrast plays a less prominent role for the low‐level baroclinicity. Cyclones remaining on the warm side of the Kuroshio SST front (C2), as well as those crossing the SST front from the warm to the cold side (C3) are characterized by higher intensification, associated with a stronger upper-level jet in the Pacific. Comparing the different cyclone categories, there is no direct effect of the SST front on cyclone intensification in both regions. However, the SST front contributes to the climatological low‐level baroclinicity, providing a conducive environment for cyclone intensification for the cyclones crossing the SST front.

How to cite: Tsopouridis, L., Spensberger, C., and Spengler, T.: Different cyclone characteristics along the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio SST front regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7703, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7703, 2021.

EGU21-16522 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Statistical associations of teleconnection indices and space weather with spring weather pattern in the Eastern Baltic region

Giedrė Kacienė, Jonė Venclovienė, and Deivydas Kiznys

The studies of associations between solar inputs and climate are mostly designed for winter or cold period; whereas the knowledge about these associations during spring on a day-to-day time scale are very scarce. Therefore, the aim of this study is to detect the response of spring air temperature (T), relative humidity (RH), and atmospheric pressure (ATP) to variation in teleconnection indices and space weather variables on the day-to-day timescale during the period of 1998–2017 in six cities of Eastern part of the Baltic region. We created a multivariate linear regression model for weather variables including month, the linear and seasonal trend, different teleconnection patterns, El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the Quasi-biennial Oscillation (QBO) phase, the presence of Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW), and space weather variables.

The multivariate models for the mean daily weather variables showed a positive association between T and the daily Arctic oscillation (AO), monthly Scandinavian pattern (SCA) indices, solar proton events (SPEs) with a lag of 1-9 days, and solar wind dynamic pressure (P) with a lag of 1-2 days and negative association between T and East Atlantic/West Russia (EA/WR) index. The linear and seasonal trends, the presence of SSW during March, and changes in AO, EA/WR, and SCA indices explained about 73% of the variation in mean daily T in the investigated region in spring. The presence of the daily mean proton flux of > 10 MeV and energy over 10 pfu with a lag of 1-9 days and higher P with a lag of 1-2 days were also related to higher mean T. The mean RH positively correlated with a long-term and short-term variation in galactic cosmic rays (GCR) and solar wind speed (SWS) with a lag of 0-6 days and negatively correlated with EAWR and NINO3.4 indices. The seasonal variation, the presence of SSW during March, the QBO phase, and the changes in the EA/WRI and ENSO explained over 38% of variation in the daily mean RH in spring.

The mean ATP was negatively associated with both long-term and short-term changes in GCR and positively associated with the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO), EA/WR, and SCA indices, By component of interplanetary magnetic field with a lag of 2 days, P, days of Stream Interaction Regions (SIRs), and SWS with a lag of 4-6 days. These space weather variables had stronger effect on spring ATP in the eastern part of the Baltic region as compared to stratospheric events and teleconnection patterns. Results of the present study show the significant short-term effects of SSW, SPEs, SIRs, and solar wind variables on spring weather pattern in the Eastern part of the Baltic region.

How to cite: Kacienė, G., Venclovienė, J., and Kiznys, D.: Statistical associations of teleconnection indices and space weather with spring weather pattern in the Eastern Baltic region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16522, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16522, 2021.

EGU21-2896 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Tropospheric impact of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings in Central and Eastern Europe

Robert Hrițac, Lucian Sfîcă, and Pavel Ichim

The North Hemisphere winter stratosphere is frequently affected by large and rapid temperature increases, known as Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (SSWs). The strongest and most spectacular events, known as the Major Mid-Winter Warmings, cause a temporary reversal of climatological westerly zonal mean winds and, in some cases, even the breakup of the stratospheric polar vortex into several smaller vortices. The following downward propagation of stratospheric anomalies to the upper and middle troposphere has been associated with significant weather anomalies resembling a negative Northern Annular Mode (NAM) regime over Eurasia and North America. These events are often involved in winter weather extremes in Northern Hemisphere, therefore a better understanding of their occurrence and development could be helpful for the improvement of medium term forecast of extreme meteorological conditions.

In order to assess the impact of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings on surface weather conditions in central and eastern Europe, all major SSW events identified in the period 1979 – 2020 were classified in 5 major types using a k-means cluster analysis method. Then, in order to determine the changes in tropospheric circulation as an effect of each SSW, we identified the main weather circulation types in Europe by performing a cluster analysis of 500 hPa geopotential height and sea level pressure. After that, the changes in frequencies of these types, as well as the mean composite anomalies of the two aforementioned parameters were assessed. This has been done for three intervals: one month before and two months after a SSW event. The surface and lower troposphere impact was studied using the mean composite anomalies of several parameters: 2 m temperature, total precipitation amount, snowfall and snow depth, for the same intervals.

The results show a great deal of variability in the surface effects of SSW events. The general impact of SSW events consisted in a tendency towards a diminishing of the frequency of westerlies, and a subsequent increase in the frequency of both Mediterranean cyclones and high latitude blocking conditions, with their associated temperature and precipitation anomalies. Also, a second major output of the study indicates that in central and eastern Europe these SSW events lead to harsh winter conditions in 30% of cases, but also to abnormal warm winters intervals in other 25% of cases, depending on the type of the SSW. However, some events show a less marked impact on tropospheric weather, while other SSW do not propagate from the stratosphere to the upper and middle troposphere. Taking into account the type and characteristics of each SSW might significantly increase the predictability of their tropospheric effects.

How to cite: Hrițac, R., Sfîcă, L., and Ichim, P.: Tropospheric impact of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings in Central and Eastern Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2896, 2021.

The estimation of regional extreme events (heavy precipitation and droughts) in Central Europe under ongoing climate change especially includes an evaluation of the relationship between atmospheric circulation types and regional droughts taking place in the bilateral research project WETRAX+ (WEather Patterns, Cyclone TRAcks, and related precipitation EXtremes). The study area is located in the south of central Europe, including Austria, parts of Germany, Switzerland, and the Czech Republic.

For a precipitation-conditioned circulation type classification, atmospheric variable fields from gridded daily JRA55 reanalysis data (Japan Meteorological Agency 2018) and gridded daily precipitation data based on 1756 weather stations in the study area (Zentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik 2018) were used for the observation period 1961 to 2017. Seven different regional climate model runs of the Euro-Cordex – Initiative and from ReKliEs-De (Regional Climate Projections Ensemble for Germany) as well as three runs of the global climate model ECHAM6 (greenhouse gas scenario RCP 8.5) were used to estimate future changes in two projection periods (2031-2060 and 2071-2100).

The large-scale atmospheric circulation types have been derived using a non-hierarchical cluster analysis provided in the COST733 Classification Software. The drought-relevant circulation types are determined according to relative frequencies of circulation type days under a particular percentile of precipitation: If at least 20 percent of the circulation type days are below the 20th percentile of precipitation, the circulation type is defined as drought relevant. Drought-relevant circulation types are examined in terms of trends, persistence, changes in monthly occurrence frequencies, and within-type variability. When transferring the circulation types to the climate model data, each single day of the projection period is assigned to the circulation type to whose centroid fields the respective single fields have the smallest Euclidean distance.

During the observation period, the trend analyses show that the occurrence of drought-relevant circulation types is significantly more often associated with higher temperatures and lower relative humidity. First results of the analysis for the future climate show an increase of central high-pressure areas over Central and Eastern Europe for the months April to September. Anticyclonic weather conditions with a resulting southwesterly flow occur less frequently.

How to cite: Thanheiser, S.: Variability and changes of drought-relevant circulation types in southern central Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2642, 2021.

EGU21-12881 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Linking Large-scale Circulation Descriptors to Precipitation Variability in the Northern French Alps

Antoine Blanc, Juliette Blanchet, and Jean-Dominique Creutin

This work analyses the link between Western Europe large-scale circulation and precipitation variability in the Northern French Alps from 1950 to 2017. We consider simple descriptors characterizing the daily 500hPa geopotential height fields. They are the Maximum Pressure Difference - representing the range of geopotential heights over Western Europe -, and the singularity - representing the mean distance between a geopotential shape and its closest analogs, i.e. the way this geopotential shape is reproduced in the climatology. These descriptors are compared to the occurrence of different atmospheric influences - Atlantic, Mediterranean, Northeast, Anticyclonic - and to the leading mode of large-scale circulation variability over Europe - the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) - for explaining precipitation variability in the Isère River catchment from one day to 10 years. We show that the Maximum Pressure Difference and the singularity of geopotential shapes explain a significant part of precipitation variability in the Northern French Alps from 10 days to 10 years, especially in winter (correlation values of 0.7). These descriptors provide much better performance than NAO and the same performance as the occurrence of the Atlantic influence, which is the best performing atmospheric influence. This means that simple characteristics of large-scale circulation - that are easy to implement - provide as much information as weather pattern classification to explain precipitation variability in the Northern French Alps.

How to cite: Blanc, A., Blanchet, J., and Creutin, J.-D.: Linking Large-scale Circulation Descriptors to Precipitation Variability in the Northern French Alps, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12881, 2021.

EGU21-9183 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

North Atlantic Oscillation-related impacts on precipitation over the Italian Peninsula during the 1979-2020 period

Paula Lorenzo Sánchez and Leonardo Aragão

The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has been widely recognized as one of the main patterns of atmospheric variability over the northern hemisphere, helping to understand variations on the North Atlantic Jet (NAJ) position and its influence on storm-tracks, atmospheric blocking and Rossby Wave breaking. Among several relevant teleconnection patterns identified through different timescales, the most prominent ones are found for northern Europe during winter months, when positive (negative) phases of NAO are related to wetter (drier) conditions. Although it is not well defined yet, an opposite connection is observed for the Mediterranean region, where negative NAO values are often associated with high precipitation. Therefore, the main goal of this study is to identify which regions and periods of the year are the most susceptible to abundant NAO-related precipitation throughout the Italian Peninsula. For doing so, the last 42 years period (1979-2020) was analysed using the Fifth Generation ECMWF Atmospheric ReAnalysis of the Global Climate (ERA5). The NAO index was calculated using the Mean Sea Level Pressure (MSLP) extracted from the nearest gridpoints to Reykjavik, Ponta Delgada, Lisbon and Gibraltar, with a time resolution of one hour and horizontal spatial resolution of 0.25ºx0.25º. Both NAO index and MSLP time series were validated for different timescales (hourly, daily, monthly and seasonal) using the Automated Surface Observing System data and the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) high-resolution dataset (based on measured data). High correlations, ranging from 0.92 to 0.98, were found for all stations, timescales and evaluated parameters. To quantify the influence of NAO over the Mediterranean region, the monthly averaged ERA5 ‘total precipitation’ data over the Italian Peninsula [35-48º N; 5-20º E] were used. As expected, the results concerning NAO x Precipitation presented the best correlations when analysed monthly, confirming some of the already known NAO signatures over the Italian Peninsula: higher correlations during winter and over the Tyrrhenian coast, and lower correlations during summer and over the Apennines, the Adriatic Sea and the Ionian Sea. On the other hand, the precipitation over the Alps and the Tunisian coast presented a remarkable signature of positive NAO values that, despite a lower statistical significance (85-90%), is in agreement with recent findings of observational studies. In addition, significant negative correlations were identified for the spring and autumn months over the Tyrrhenian area. Among those, the high correlations found during May are particularly interesting, as they follow the behaviour described in recent studies performed using the same high-resolution dataset (ERA5), which have identified an increased number of cyclones over the Mediterranean during this month. This connection suggests that NAO could also be used to explore the potential penetration of the North Atlantic depressions into the Mediterranean Basin. 

Keywords: NAO; Teleconnections; ERA5; ReAnalysis; Mediterranean; Climatology.

How to cite: Lorenzo Sánchez, P. and Aragão, L.: North Atlantic Oscillation-related impacts on precipitation over the Italian Peninsula during the 1979-2020 period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9183, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9183, 2021.

EGU21-4334 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

A deep learning approach for the identification of the synoptic-scale drivers of long-duration mixed precipitation in Montréal (Canada)

Magdalena Mittermeier, Émilie Bresson, Dominique Paquin, and Ralf Ludwig

Climate change is altering the Earth’s atmospheric circulation and the dynamic drivers of extreme events. Extreme weather events pose a great potential risk to infrastructure and human security. In Montréal (Québec, Canada) long-duration mixed precipitation events (freezing rain and/or ice pellets) are high-impact cold-season hazards and an understanding of how climate change alters their occurrence is of high societal interest.

Here, we introduce a two-staged deep learning approach that uses the synoptic-scale drivers of mixed precipitation to identify these extreme events in archived climate model data. The approach is destined for the application on regional climate model (RCM) data over the Montréal area. The dominant dynamic mechanism leading to mixed precipitation in Montréal is pressure-driven channeling of winds along the St. Lawrence river valley. The identification of the synoptic-scale pressure pattern related to pressure-driven channeling is a visual image classification task that is addressed with supervised machine learning. A convolutional neural network (CNN) is trained on the classification of the synoptic-scale pressure patterns by using a large training database derived from an ensemble of the Canadian Regional Climate Model version 5 (CRCM5). The CRCM5 is to our knowledge the only RCM available so far that employs the diagnostic method by Bourgouin to simulate mixed precipitation inline and thus delivers training examples and labels for this supervised classification task.

The CNN correctly identifies 90 % of the Bourgouin mixed precipitation cases in the test set. The weak point of the approach is a high type I error, which is enhanced in a second stage by applying a temperature condition. The evaluation on an CRCM5 run driven by ERA-Interim reanalysis reveals a still low precision of 21 % and thus a Matthews correlation coefficient of 0.39. The deep learning approach can be applied to ensembles of regional climate models on the North America grid of the Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX-NA).

How to cite: Mittermeier, M., Bresson, É., Paquin, D., and Ludwig, R.: A deep learning approach for the identification of the synoptic-scale drivers of long-duration mixed precipitation in Montréal (Canada), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4334, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4334, 2021.

EGU21-15509 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Modes of variability in the Tropical Atlantic and its influences on the precipitation regime in Brazil

Andressa Cardoso and Ilana Wainer

Tropical Atlantic variability modes can influence atmospheric circulation impacting the precipitation regimes over South American and the intensity of the meteorological systems associated. The objective of this work was to analyse the centennial variability and trends of the zonal and meridional modes in the Tropical Atlantic Ocean and their influences in the precipitation, focusing on the North and Northeast of Brazil. The zonal mode was estimated using the ATL3 index, calculated by the monthly sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTa) within 3ºS-3º N and 20ºW-0.  The AMM index represents the meridional mode and was obtained by the difference of the monthly SSTa between the North (5-20ºN and 60ºW-10ºE) and South (20ºS-5ºN and 60ºW-10ºE) Atlantic.  The indices were calculated for three reanalyses, NOAA ERSST v4, ERA20C and ERA-Interim, and compared to the observational dataset OISSTV2 using correlation for the 1982-2010 period. The results showed a positive trend in both indices considering the period of 1900-2010 for the two centennial reanalyses (NOAA ERSST v4 and ERA20C). However, the trend is higher for the ATL3 index and lower for the AMM considering the NOAA reanalysis. The monthly precipitation was also used to analyse the relationship between the indices and precipitation pattern. The correlation between ATL3 and AMM and the precipitation field using the NOAA reanalysis showed that ATL3 positively influences rain over northeastern Brazil, throughout the Tropical South Atlantic, and northwestern Africa between 1900 and 2010. The opposite is observed relative to AMM, once anomalies of negative (positive) precipitation in the Southern (Northern) Hemisphere are related to a positive SSTa in the region. These results may be related to the most intense SSTa in the northern tropical Atlantic, which shifts the ITCZ, promoting more precipitation further north, and favors the hurricane season All reanalyses represented the indices in agreement with observations, however, the statistical parameters were better for with the ERA-Interim. A possible reason is that ERA-Interim is a newer reanalysis, with more observed assimilated data. Moreover, it has a finer resolution when compared to the other datasets, which contributes to a better representation of the precipitation patterns.  In conclusion, ATL3 positively influences precipitation in the North and Northeast Brazilian regions, as the warmer SST drives the position of the ITCZ. Therefore, the observed increasing trend in the precipitation over this region over the past years was associated with the increase in SSTa over the Tropical Atlantic, which may favor precipitation in the north and northeast of Brazil.

How to cite: Cardoso, A. and Wainer, I.: Modes of variability in the Tropical Atlantic and its influences on the precipitation regime in Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15509, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15509, 2021.

During austral summer, persistent tropical-extratropical (TE) cloud bands, such as the South Atlantic Convergence Zone (SACZ) over South America, link tropical humid areas to the subtropics. Changes in circulation due to global warming is already impacting the location and duration of these TE cloud bands, affecting the hydrological regime of the subtropics. In this study, we present an automatic object-based identification of TE cloud bands which we utilize to obtain an event set of TE cloud bands over South America. This approach and our newly-identified sample base are ideal for understanding interactions between the variability and change in the regional mean state and synoptic-scale weather systems. TE cloud bands are responsible for almost 60% of the subtropical precipitation during the South America rainy season (November to March), mostly produced by SACZ events, a TE cloud band persisting for four or more days. Their location and persistence are modulated by the propagation of synoptic-scale extratropical disturbances interacting with intraseasonal variability in the basic state upper-level zonal wind. The persistent SACZ events (i.e., lasting four or more days) are supported by upper-level westerly anomalies over the subtropics caused by an anomalous trough in the subtropical jet which favours the propagation extratropical disturbances deeper into the tropics. Conversely, transient events occur when the Bolivian High is displaced/expanded southeastward, resulting in upper-level easterly winds occurring over subtropical latitudes and blocking the equatorward propagation of Rossby waves.

In recent decades, changes in circulation due to global warming has affected the basic-state circulation, resulting in different impacts in transient and persistent TE events throughout the rainy season. Over South America, the number of days with TE events has decreased during the rainy season peak but increased during onset and cessation months, resulting in the displacement of accumulated precipitation into early and late summer. These results are obtained by comparing two periods: 1979-1996 and 1997-2018, excluding ENSO years. These synoptic-scale changes are related to changes in the position of the subtropical jet and its trough, impacting on the propagation of RW towards South America. In the beginning (November) and end (February) of the rainy season, the westerlies have become stronger over subtropical South America, favouring the development of more persistent events and resulting in an increase in the total precipitation during TE events. During the peak of the rainy season (December and January), changes in upper-level circulation have reduced the conditions necessary to the development of TE events, affecting the total precipitation during these months. We show that anomalous subtropical convection from the cloud bands is a source of Rossby waves that interact with the basic flow, resulting in downwind enhancement or damping of the extratropical disturbances. Therefore, these contemporary changes over South America are likely to have implications for changes Rossby Wave spectra in the Southern Hemisphere, especially downstream from the SACZ.

How to cite: Zilli, M. and Hart, N.: Large-scale circulation changes over South America are impacting synoptic-scale tropical-extratropical interactions and altering rainfall seasonality, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10393, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10393, 2021.

EGU21-13259 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

Regionalization of seasonal precipitation over the Tibetan Plateau

Hui-Wen Lai, Hans W. Chen, Julia Kukulies, Tinghai Ou, and Deliang Chen

The Tibetan Plateau (TP) is the “water tower” of Asia and is the origin of most major rivers that provide water resources supporting countries in Asia. Changes in precipitation over the plateau play an important role in the water management in those areas, but the spatiotemporal variations of the precipitation over the TP are not well understood mainly because of the sparsely distributed in-situ observation sites. This study takes advantage of the newly available high-resolution ERA5 reanalysis and the Global Precipitation Measurement satellite product IMERG together with in-situ observations to characterize the seasonality of precipitation over the TP using a self-organizing map algorithm fed with precipitation data from 2000 to 2019. Specifically, this study aims to (1) identify regions with distinct seasonality in precipitation, (2) determine the interannual variability in the classification and regional precipitation, and (3) explore the roles played by large-scale atmospheric circulations on the seasonality of regional precipitation. The classification reveals three major precipitation regimes in the TP centered at the western, southwestern, and eastern plateau. On a year-to-year basis, the western region is relatively robust, while the southwestern and eastern regions tend to shift mainly between the central and northern TP. A composite analysis shows that the western region experiences larger amounts of precipitation in winter and early spring when the westerly jet is anomalously strong to the north of the TP. Precipitation variations in the southwestern region are associated with intensity changes in the South Asian High and Indian summer monsoon. The precipitation in the eastern region is correlated with the Indian summer monsoon and anticyclonic circulation over the western North Pacific. Our findings provide a better understanding of the regional and interannual variations of precipitation regimes over the TP, and could help to interpret future changes in precipitation regimes due to climate change.

How to cite: Lai, H.-W., Chen, H. W., Kukulies, J., Ou, T., and Chen, D.: Regionalization of seasonal precipitation over the Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13259, 2021.

EGU21-3339 | vPICO presentations | CL2.3

The impact of atmospheric circulation on wind energy resource using self-organizing maps

Kostas Philippopoulos and Chris G. Tzanis

The sensitivity of wind to the Earth’s energy budget and the changes it causes in the climate system has a significant impact on the wind energy sector. The scope of this work is to examine the association of atmospheric circulation with the wind speed distribution characteristics on different timescales over Greece. Emphasis is given to the effect of specific regimes on the wind speed distributions at different locations. The work is based on using synoptic climatology as a tool for providing information regarding wind variability. This approach allows a more detailed description of the effect of changes in large-scale atmospheric circulation on wind energy potential. The atmospheric classification methodology, upon the selection of relevant atmospheric variables and domains, includes a Principal Components Analysis for dimension reduction purposes and subsequently, the classification is performed using an artificial neural network and in particular self-organizing maps. In the resulting feature map, the neighboring nodes are inter-connected and each one is associated with the composites of the selected large-scale variables. Upon the assignment and the characterization of each day in one of the resulting patterns, a daily catalog is constructed and frequency analysis is performed. In the context of estimating wind energy potential variability for each atmospheric pattern, the fit of multiple probability functions to the surface wind speed frequency distributions is performed. The most suitable function is selected based on a set of difference and correlation statistical measures, along with the use of goodness-of-fit statistical tests. The study employs the ERA5 reanalysis dataset with a 0.25° spatial resolution from 1979/01/01 up to 2019/12/31 and the wind field data are extracted at the 10m and the 100m levels. The approach could be valuable to the wind energy industry and can provide the required scientific understanding for the optimal siting of Wind Energy Conversion Systems considering the atmospheric circulation and the electricity interconnection infrastructure in the region. Considering the emerging issue of energy safety, accurate wind energy production estimates can contribute towards the establishment of wind as the primary energy source and in meeting the increasing energy demand.

How to cite: Philippopoulos, K. and Tzanis, C. G.: The impact of atmospheric circulation on wind energy resource using self-organizing maps, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3339, 2021.

CL2.5 – Predictions of climate from seasonal to (multi)decadal timescales (S2D) and their applications

EGU21-737 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Wind Stress-Induced Multiyear Predictability of Annual Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies in the Extratropical North Atlantic

Annika Reintges, Mojib Latif, Mohammad Hadi Bordbar, and Wonsun Park

Predictability of sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the North Atlantic on timescales on several years and beyond is commonly attributed to buoyancy-forced changes of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and associated poleward heat transport.

We examine the role of the wind stress anomalies in decadal hindcasts for the prediction of annual SST anomalies in the extratropical North Atlantic. A global climate model (KCM) is forced by ERA-interim wind stress anomalies over the period 1979-2017. The resulting climate states serve as initial conditions for decadal hindcasts.

We find significant skill in predicting annual SST anomalies over the central extratropical North Atlantic with anomaly correlation coefficients exceeding 0.6 at lead times of 4 to 7 years. The skill of annual SSTs is basically insensitive to the calendar month of initialization. We suggest that this skill is linked to a gyre-driven upper-ocean heat content anomaly that leads anomalous SSTs by several years.

Furthermore, another set of model experiments, employing a freshwater flux correction, will be assessed. Freshwater flux correction has been shown to improve the model’s mean state of North Atlantic surface properties and of the circulation. We will address the potentially improved predictability and underlying mechanisms.

How to cite: Reintges, A., Latif, M., Bordbar, M. H., and Park, W.: Wind Stress-Induced Multiyear Predictability of Annual Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies in the Extratropical North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-737, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-737, 2021.

EGU21-10788 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Skillful Dynamical-Statistical Predictions of European Summer Temperature

Juliette Mignot, Leonard Borchert, Vimal Koul, Björn Mayer, Matthew Menary, Giovanni Sgubin, and Didier Swingedouw

While decadal North Atlantic sea surface temperature (SST) variations are generally predictable, prediction skill of surface temperature over Europe is much more limited. We invoke here observed links of decadal European summer temperature variations to North Atlantic SST changes in the preceding months to produce skillful decadal predictions of European summer temperature variations.

We analyze the ERA5 reanalysis data set to re-assess the observed influence of North Atlantic SST on European summer temperature for the period 1960-2020. To facilitate possible merging activities of initialized decadal prediction simulations and climate projections in the future, we examine predictions for the target regions Northern Europe (NEU), Central Europe (CEU) and Mediterranean (MED) as are defined as the SREX regions for IPCC Assessment Report 5. Summer (June-July-August: JJA) temperature in NEU shows significant co-variability in a decadal spectral band with MAM SST in the Western North Atlantic (WNA), while JJA CEU temperature shows the same with JJA SST in that region. JJA temperature in the MED region shows significant decadal co-variability with the annual mean AMV index. SVD analysis illustrates that an atmospheric Rossby wave train connects North Atlantic SST to European summer temperature changes.

Dynamical retrospective forecasts from a suite of decadal prediction systems from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 Decadal Climate Prediction Project are tested for their agreement with observations for the period 1960-2020. Dynamical predictions of JJA temperature in NEU, CEU and MED are mostly not skillful at lead years 1-10 in the CMIP6 simulations. Most models do, however, show skill in the SST regions that are connected to these summer temperature variations, identified above. We use these SST predictions to drive a simple statistical model that rescales the variance of the SST predictions according to observed SAT variance in the target region. This dynamical-statistical prediction is shown to be skillful at lead years 1-10 for summer temperature in the SREX regions. This skill, however, relies on the skill of the models in predicting the respective SST index. Our work therefore indicates a promising avenue to produce skillful decadal climate predictions over land based on skillful predictions of the ocean.

How to cite: Mignot, J., Borchert, L., Koul, V., Mayer, B., Menary, M., Sgubin, G., and Swingedouw, D.: Skillful Dynamical-Statistical Predictions of European Summer Temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10788, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10788, 2021.

EGU21-3844 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Decadal Prediction of Marine Heatwaves in MPI-ESM

Laura Hövel, Sebastian Brune, and Johanna Baehr

Marine Heatwaves (MHWs) are Sea Surface Temperature (SST) extremes that can have devastating impacts on marine ecosystems but can also impact circulation patterns in the ocean and the atmosphere. The variability of MHWs has been studied in historical observations and longterm climate projections, but predictability has only been analyzed on seasonal timescales. Here, we we present the first attempt to study the decadal predictability of MHW days per year in an ensemble of decadal hindcasts based on the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM-LR).

Our results show that there are strong regional differences in prediction skill. While many regions show little to no skill, we find in the Subpolar North Atlantic correlation coefficients up to 0.7 for MHW days up to lead year 8. We demonstrate that these correlations mainly arise from correctly predicting the absence of MHWs in individual years. MHW days per year might be successfully predicted by only using yearly mean SST as a proxy, which also demonstrates that in the Subpolar North Atlantic, any increase in SST is accompanied by more MHWs and vice versa.

How to cite: Hövel, L., Brune, S., and Baehr, J.: Decadal Prediction of Marine Heatwaves in MPI-ESM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3844, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3844, 2021.

EGU21-10033 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Recalibrating Extremes for Decadal Predictions

France-Audrey Magro, Alexander Pasternack, and Henning W. Rust

Decadal predictions have become essential for near-term decision making and adaptation strategies. In parallel, interest in weather and climate extremes has increased strongly in the past. Thus, a combination of decadal predictions and extreme value theory is reasonable and necessary. Since decadal predictions suffer from typical discrepancies, such as start- and lead-year dependent conditional and unconditional biases, many ways for their recalibration have been proposed (Eade et al., 2014; Fučkar et al.,2014; Fyfe et al., 2011; Kharin et al., 2012; Kruschke et al., 2016; Raftery et al., 2005; Sansom et al., 2016; Sloughter et al., 2007). However, in previous studies, extremes have not been considered. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate how extremes from decadal predictions can be adequately recalibrated and how this affects forecasting skill. Pasternack et al. (2018) introduced a parametric Decadal Climate Forecast Recalibration Strategy (DeFoReSt 1.0), based on estimating polynomial adjustment terms (Gangstø et al., 2013). DeFoReSt assumes normality for the probability distribution (PDF) to be recalibrated and optimizes the cross-validated continuous ranked probability score (CRPS) with this assumption build in Gneiting et al. (2005). For a proof of concept, Pasternack et al. (2018) introduced a toy model for generating pseudo decadal forecast-observation pairs. For toy model data and surface temperatures from MiKlip hindcasts, improvement of forecast quality over a simple calibration from Kruschke et al. (2016) has been found. We extend these methods to extreme values with two modifications: (1) Follow DeFoReSt, but assume general extreme value (GEV) distributed forecasts. Again the CRPS is optimized but with the GEV build into the score (Friederichs and Thorarinsdottir, 2012). Both DeFoReSt strategies (DeFoReSt-normaland DeFoReSt-GEV) and the calibration from Kruschke et al. (2016) are compared to a forecast based on climatology. (2) The toy model is modified to generate pseudo decadal forecast-observation pairs with GEV distributed observations. For validation, a bootstrapping scheme is applied to temperature maxima hindcasts from MiKlip verified with HadEX2 observations. After recalibration, both DeFoReSt strategies perform similar for the toy model and MiKlip hindcasts, none significantly outperforms the other. However, they consistently show considerable improvements over the climatological forecast for the lower and upper quartiles in the toy model data. For the recalibrated MiKlip hindcasts, the findings are in accordance, but not as considerable, presumably due to their very small ensemble size (Sienz et al., 2016). This suggests that extremes may be directly recalibrated with the assumption of a Normal distribution, as long as this represents the characteristics of the decadal forecast ensemble. Thus, the forecasting skill of recalibrations appears to be unaffected by the underlying distribution of the observations.

How to cite: Magro, F.-A., Pasternack, A., and Rust, H. W.: Recalibrating Extremes for Decadal Predictions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10033, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10033, 2021.

EGU21-11950 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Decadal predictability in the North Atlantic as seen by EC-Earth3.

Bo Christiansen, Shuting Yang, and Dominic Matte

We study the decadal predictability in the North Atlantic region using  ensembles of historical and decadal prediction experiments with EC-Earth3  and other CMIP models. In particular, the focus is on the NAO and the sub-polar gyre region. In general the impact of initialization is weak  for lead-times larger than one to two years and we investigate different ways to isolate and estimate the statistical significance of this impact. For the sub-polar gyre region the prediction skill is found to be mainly due to an abrupt change in the late 90ies and models disagree on whether this skill is due to forcing or initial conditions. Also the predictability of the NAO is weak and varies with lead-time and length of the predicted period. We only see weak evidence of the 'signal-to-noise paradox'. The importance of the ensemble size is also studied.                                                              

How to cite: Christiansen, B., Yang, S., and Matte, D.: Decadal predictability in the North Atlantic as seen by EC-Earth3., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11950, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11950, 2021.

EGU21-5101 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Potential application of decadal prediction for Irish fisheries

Catherine O'Beirne, Louise Vaughan, Vimal Koul, and André Düsterhus

The Irish sea food sector and the associated planning and managing of the fisheries sector is of great importance for the Irish economy. In decadal climate prediction the North Atlantic has already shown significant prediction skill for initialized predictions. However, making them applicable for a wider community is a challenge. For this a better understanding of the North Atlantic mechanisms, like the sub-polar gyre (SPG) is essential, as those systems have higher predictability as the local environmental factors for the fish themselves.

Primary focus is the investigation of the environmental impact factors for the target species and the capability of the decadal prediction system to predict them. Besides the usual variables, like surface temperature (SST) or surface salinity, it is important to take a look at their predictability in the depth. Further analysis would then allow to investigate how this predictability can be increased by mechanisms acting on a larger scale. A final step will be to tailor the predictions for the Irish fisheries sector.

In this contribution, we will show how the decadal prediction system based on the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM) is able to predict oceanographic variables like temperature and salinity in the North East Atlantic. This will allow us to get an insight into the potential predictability of important species for the Irish fisheries sector, and with it the possibility for improving the current fish stock management systems in Ireland.

How to cite: O'Beirne, C., Vaughan, L., Koul, V., and Düsterhus, A.: Potential application of decadal prediction for Irish fisheries, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5101, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5101, 2021.

EGU21-9263 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

A large ensemble decadal prediction system with MPI-ESM

Sebastian Brune, Vimal Koul, David Marcolino Nielsen, Laura Hövel, Holger Pohlmann, André Düsterhus, and Johanna Baehr

Current state-of-the-art decadal ensemble prediction systems are run with an ensemble size of 10 to 40 members, their retrospective forecasts of the past are used to assess the system's prediction skill. Here, we present an attempt for a large ensemble decadal prediction system for the time period 1960-today, with an ensemble size of 80 members, based on the low resolution version of the Max Planck Institute Earth system model (MPI-ESM-LR). The ensemble is forced with CMIP6 conditions and initialized every year in November through a weakly coupled assimilation using atmospheric reanalyses via nudging and observed oceanic temperature and salinity profiles via a 16-member ensemble Kalman filter. To generate ensemble members beyond 16, we use additional physical perturbations at stratospheric height. The analysis of our large ensemble prediction system presented here aims for answering two questions: (1) How does the ensemble mean deterministic prediction skill for global and North Atlantic key climate indices change with ensemble size? (2) How well may the 80-member ensemble serve as a basis for a robust statistical analysis of probabilities of extremes in the North Atlantic sector? Preliminary results for global and regional air surface temperature show that in terms of ensemble mean ACC and full ensemble CPRSS with reference data, the 80-member ensemble leads to similar prediction skill as the 16-member ensemble. This indicates that the additional ensemble members may lead to a better sampling of the distribution of model trajectories, paving the way for a more robust statistical probabilistic analysis.

How to cite: Brune, S., Koul, V., Nielsen, D. M., Hövel, L., Pohlmann, H., Düsterhus, A., and Baehr, J.: A large ensemble decadal prediction system with MPI-ESM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9263, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9263, 2021.

EGU21-2093 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Process-based analysis of land carbon flux predictability

István Dunkl, Aaron Spring, and Victor Brovkin

The land-atmosphere CO2 exchange exhibits a very high interannual variability which dominates variability in atmospheric CO2 concentration. Despite efforts to decrease the discrepancy between simulated and observed terrestrial carbon fluxes, the uncertainty in trends and patterns of the land carbon fluxes remains high. This difficulty raises the question to what extent the terrestrial carbon cycle is even predictable, and which processes explain the predictability. In this study, the perfect model approach is used to assess the potential predictability of net primary production (NPP) and heterotrophic respiration (Rh) by using initialized ensemble experiments simulated with the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model. In order to determine which processes are causing the derived predictability patterns, carbon flux predictability was decomposed into individual drivers. Regression analysis was used to determine the contribution of the predictability of different environmental drivers to the predictability of NPP and Rh (Soil moisture, temperature and radiation for NPP and soil organic carbon, temperature and precipitation for Rh). The main drivers of NPP predictability are soil moisture and temperature, while the predictability signal from radiation is lost after the first month of simulation. Rh predictability is predominantly driven by soil organic carbon, temperature and locally by precipitation. This decomposition of predictability shows that the relatively high Rh predictability is due to the generally high predictability of soil organic carbon. The assessed seasonality in predictability patterns can be explained by the change in limiting factors of NPP and Rh over the wet and dry months. This leads to the adjustment of carbon flux predictability to the predictability of the currently limiting environmental factor. Differences in the predictability between initializations can be attributed to the interannual variability in soil moisture and temperature predictability. This variability is caused by the state dependency of nonlinear ecosystem processes. These results reveal the crucial regions and ecosystem processes to be considered when initializing a carbon prediction system.

How to cite: Dunkl, I., Spring, A., and Brovkin, V.: Process-based analysis of land carbon flux predictability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2093, 2021.

EGU21-10047 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Using a CMIP5 multi-model ensemble to model glacier mass balance on decadal scales

Larissa van der Laan, Kristian Förster, Fabien Maussion, and Adam Scaife

Glaciers fulfil several important roles in the earth system, including being clear indicators of climate change and providing essential freshwater storage and downstream runoff to 22% of the global population. In addition, they are the main contributors to sea level rise and are expected to remain so throughout the 21st Century. In order to monitor glacier development, observing and predicting glacier mass balance on different spatial and temporal scales is essential. The current study aims to improve the understanding of glacier mass balance prediction on the decadal scale (5-15 years), a rarely studied time scale in the context of glaciers, but if reliable, highly applicable for glacier related water resource management and sea level rise predictions. This is achieved through the use of CMIP5 decadal climate prediction multi-model ensembles (reforecasts) to force the mass balance component of the Open Global Glacier Model (OGGM). This method is applied to 254 reference glaciers, distributed throughout 17 of the 19 Randolph Glacier Inventory (RGI) regions. The reforecasts are initialized in 1960 and 1980 and bias corrected to the glacier scale. The following statistical analysis then gives a good indication of the skill of climate reforecasts in mass balance modelling on this glacier atypical time scale.

How to cite: van der Laan, L., Förster, K., Maussion, F., and Scaife, A.: Using a CMIP5 multi-model ensemble to model glacier mass balance on decadal scales, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10047, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10047, 2021.

EGU21-2586 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Forecast skill of autumn snow for European winter climate during the 20th century: A multi member seasonal prediction experiment

Martin Wegmann, Yvan Orsolini, Antje Weisheimer, Bart van den Hurk, and Gerrit Lohmann

As the leading climate mode to explain wintertime climate variability over Europe, the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has been extensively studied over the last decades. Recently, studies highlighted the state of the Northern Hemispheric cryosphere as possible predictor for the wintertime NAO (Cohen et al. 2014). Although several studies could find seasonal prediction skill in reanalysis data (Orsolini et al. 2016, Duville et al. 2017,Han & Sun 2018), experiments with ocean-atmosphere general circulation models (AOGCMs) still show conflicting results (Furtado et al. 2015, Handorf et al. 2015, Francis 2017, Gastineau et al. 2017). 

Here we use two kinds ECMWF seasonal prediction ensembles starting with November initial conditions taken from the long-term reanalysis ERA-20C and forecasting the following three winter months. Besides the 110-year ensemble of 50 members representing internal variability of the atmosphere, we investigate a second ensemble of 20 members where initial conditions are split between low and high snow cover years for the Northern Hemisphere. We compare two recently used Eurasian snow cover indices for their skill in predicting winter climate for the European continent. Analyzing the two forecast experiments, we found that prediction runs starting with high snow index values in November result in significantly more negative NAO states in the following winter (DJF), which in turn modulates near surface temperatures. We track the atmospheric anomalies triggered by the high snow index through the tropo- and stratosphere as well as for the individual winter months to provide a physical explanation for the formation of this particular climate state.

 

How to cite: Wegmann, M., Orsolini, Y., Weisheimer, A., van den Hurk, B., and Lohmann, G.: Forecast skill of autumn snow for European winter climate during the 20th century: A multi member seasonal prediction experiment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2586, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2586, 2021.

EGU21-10380 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Relating model bias and prediction skill in the equatorial Atlantic

Francois Counillon, Noel Keenlyside, Thomas Toniazzo, Shunya Koseki, Teferi Demissie, Ingo Bethke, and Yiguo Wang

We investigate the impact of large climatological biases in the tropical Atlantic on reanalysis and seasonal prediction performance using the Norwegian Climate Prediction Model (NorCPM) in a standard and an anomaly coupled configuration. Anomaly coupling corrects the climatological surface wind and sea surface temperature (SST) fields exchanged between oceanic and atmospheric models, and thereby significantly reduces the climatological model biases of precipitation and SST. NorCPM combines the Norwegian Earth system model (NorESM) with the Ensemble Kalman Filter and assimilates SST and hydrographic profiles. We perform a reanalysis for the period 1980-2010 and a set of seasonal predictions for the period 1985-2010 with both model configurations. Anomaly coupling improves the accuracy and the reliability of the reanalysis in the tropical Atlantic, because the corrected model enables a dynamical reconstruction that satisfies better the observations and their uncertainty.  Anomaly coupling also enhances seasonal prediction skill in the equatorial Atlantic to the level of the best models of the North American multi-model ensemble, while the standard model is among the worst. However, anomaly coupling slightly damps the amplitude of Atlantic Niño and Niña events. The skill enhancements achieved by anomaly coupling are largest for forecast started from August and February. There is strong spring predictability barrier, with little skill in predicting conditions in June. The anomaly coupled system show some skill in predicting the secondary Atlantic Niño-II SST variability that peaks in November-December from August 1st.

How to cite: Counillon, F., Keenlyside, N., Toniazzo, T., Koseki, S., Demissie, T., Bethke, I., and Wang, Y.: Relating model bias and prediction skill in the equatorial Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10380, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10380, 2021.

EGU21-11134 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Seasonal Predictability of Wintertime mid-latitude Cyclonic Activity over the North Atlantic and Europe

Alvise Aranyossy, Sebastian Brune, Lara Hellmich, and Johanna Baehr

We analyse the connections between the wintertime North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the eddy-driven jet stream with the mid-latitude cyclonic activity over the North Atlantic and Europe. We investigate, through the comparison against ECMWF ERA5 and hindcast simulations from the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM), the potential for enhancement of the seasonal prediction skill of the Eddy Kinetic Energy (EKE) by accounting for the connections between large-scale climate and the regional cyclonic activity. Our analysis focuses on the wintertime months (December-March) in the 1979-2019 period, with seasonal predictions initialized every November 1st. We calculate EKE from wind speeds at 250 hPa, which we use as a proxy for cyclonic activity. The zonal and meridional wind speeds are bandpass filtered with a cut-off at 3-10 days to fit with the average lifespan of mid-latitude cyclones. 

Preliminary results suggest that in ERA5, major positive anomalies in EKE, both in quantity and duration, are correlated with a northern position of the jet stream and a positive phase of the NAO. Apparently, a deepened Icelandic low-pressure system offers favourable conditions for mid-latitude cyclones in terms of growth and average lifespan. In contrast, negative anomalies in EKE over the North Atlantic and Central Europe are associated with a more equatorward jet stream, these are also linked to a negative phase of the NAO.  Thus, in ERA5, the eddy-driven jet stream and the NAO play a significant role in the spatial and temporal distribution of wintertime mid-latitude cyclonic activity over the North Atlantic and Europe. We extend this connection to the MPI-ESM hindcast simulations and present an analysis of their predictive skill of EKE for wintertime months.

How to cite: Aranyossy, A., Brune, S., Hellmich, L., and Baehr, J.: Seasonal Predictability of Wintertime mid-latitude Cyclonic Activity over the North Atlantic and Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11134, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11134, 2021.

EGU21-13694 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Quantifying Teleconnection pathways leading to Low Rainfall anomalies during Boreal Summer in Indonesian Borneo

Timothy Lam, Marlene Kretschmer, Samantha Adams, Alberto Arribas, Rachel Prudden, Elena Saggioro, Jennifer Catto, and Rosa Barciela

Teleconnections are sources of predictability for regional weather and climate, which can be represented by causal relationships between climate features in physically separated regions. In this study, teleconnections of low rainfall anomalies in Indonesian Borneo are analysed and quantified using causal inference theory and causal networks. Causal hypotheses are first developed based on climate model experiments in literature and then justified by means of partial regression analysis between NCEP reanalysis sea surface temperatures and climate indices (drivers) and rainfall data in Indonesian Borneo from various sources (target variable). We find that, as previous studies have highlighted, El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has a profound effect on rainfall in Indonesia Borneo, with positive Niño 3.4 index serving as a direct driver of low rainfall, also partially through reduced sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over Indonesian waters. On the other hand, while Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) influences Indonesian Borneo rainfall through SSTs over the same area as a thermodynamic effect, its remaining effect has shifted at multidecadal timescale, opening the rooms for further research. This work informs the potential of a systematic causal approach to statistical inference as a powerful tool to verify and explore atmospheric teleconnections and enables seasonal forecasting to strengthen prevention and control of drought and fire multihazards over peatlands in the study region.

Keywords: Tropical teleconnections, Causal inference, Climate variability, Drought, Indonesia

How to cite: Lam, T., Kretschmer, M., Adams, S., Arribas, A., Prudden, R., Saggioro, E., Catto, J., and Barciela, R.: Quantifying Teleconnection pathways leading to Low Rainfall anomalies during Boreal Summer in Indonesian Borneo, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13694, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13694, 2021.

EGU21-12575 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Role of SST for the predictability of summer atmospheric teleconnections in the Euro-Atlantic region with Self-Organising Maps

Julianna Carvalho Oliveira, Leonard Borchert, Vimal Koul, Johanna Baehr, and Eduardo Zorita

We investigate the seasonal predictability of the two dominant atmospheric teleconnections associated with the North Atlantic Jet: the Summer North Atlantic Oscillation (SNAO) and East Atlantic Pattern (EAP). We go beyond standard forecast practices by combining an ensemble predictions system with a machine learning approach. Specifically, we combine on the one hand a 30-member hindcast ensemble initialised every May between 1902 and 2008 in the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model in mixed resolution (MPI-ESM-MR), with on the other hand a neural network-based classifier Self-Organising Maps (SOM) in the ERA-20C reanalysis. We use the SOM to identify a sub-ensemble in which simulated North Atlantic sea surface temperatures (SST) at the initialisation of the prediction system (i.e. April) are linked to atmospheric modes.

While we find for summer climate at 3-4 months lead time only limited predictive skill in the ensemble mean of MPI-ESM-MR, we find significant predictive skill over many areas in the SOM-based sub-ensemble. Our results suggest that the predictive skill of European summer temperatures can be linked to the predictive skill of SNAO and EAP, which stems in turn from the – with skill predictable - temperature gradient between subpolar and subtropical gyres. We also demonstrate the predictive skill is time dependent, with high skill over the late half of the time series (1955 - 2008) and low skill in the early period (1902 - 1954).

How to cite: Carvalho Oliveira, J., Borchert, L., Koul, V., Baehr, J., and Zorita, E.: Role of SST for the predictability of summer atmospheric teleconnections in the Euro-Atlantic region with Self-Organising Maps, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12575, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12575, 2021.

EGU21-12439 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

Supervised and unsupervised learning algorithms for extreme summer temperature prediction

Maria Pyrina, Eduardo Zorita, and Sebastian Wagner

In order to predict the timing of extreme summer seasons in terms of 2 meters surface temperature (t2m), two algorithms are applied in the output of a global paleoclimate simulation. The model simulation is conducted with the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model configuration for paleoclimate (MPI-ESM-P). Global model output is provided for the period 0–1999 AD on a horizontal resolution of approximately 187 km (1.875°× 1.875°longitude by latitude grid). The t2m extremes are defined as the events with mean summer temperature higher than the 95th percentile of the training period (0-1970 AD) and are calculated separately for each grid point of the European region between 35ºN-70ºN, 10ºW-30ºE. The algorithms are trained only with data from the training period and are set to predict the summer t2m extremes of the test period 1971-1999 AD. The predictor data used for fitting the algorithms are chosen based on their known influence as boundary forcings of European summer climate. The predictor variables include springtime sea surface temperature (SST) from the NA region (0º-76ºN, 85°W-30°E) and springtime European soil moisture (SM). The skill of the predictions is evaluated based on the extremal dependence index (EDI), which depends on the hit rate and false alarm rate. The EDI values vary between -1 and 1, where 1 is the skill of a perfect forecast. The first algorithm tested is a supervised learning algorithm, which is based on a random forest classifier (RF). RF predicts the highest EDI values over Scandinavia, Scotland and around the Mediterranean region (EDI>0.5), with the SST predictor being the main contributor to that skill. The second algorithm tested, is an autoencoder neural network (AE) that learns data codings in an unsupervised manner. AE surpasses the RF skill above most European regions and predicts the highest EDI values over the southeast Mediterranean, Central Europe, and the British Isles. The AE neural network is also trained to predict the absolute value of the extreme t2m events. The skill of reproducing the absolute value of the target t2m extremes is evaluated with the Mean Absolute Error (MAE), only for those extreme events that are reproduced by the AE prediction. The MAE values for the southeast Mediterranean region, Central Europe, and the British Isles are around 2 ºC, 2.5 ºC, and 1.5 ºC, respectively. We have demonstrated the possibility of predicting a season in advance the occurrence of extreme summer t2m using an AE neural network. The AE neural network was tested in the virtual reality of a model simulation. The second step will be the application of the trained network on observational data.

How to cite: Pyrina, M., Zorita, E., and Wagner, S.: Supervised and unsupervised learning algorithms for extreme summer temperature prediction, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12439, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12439, 2021.

EGU21-3236 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5

The DWD climate prediction website

Andreas Paxian, Katja Reinhardt, Birgit Mannig, Katharina Isensee, Amelie Krug, Klaus Pankatz, Kristina Fröhlich, Miriam Tivig, Philip Lorenz, and Barbara Früh

DWD provides operational seasonal and decadal predictions of the German climate prediction system since 2016 and 2020, respectively. We plan to present these predictions together with post-processed ECMWF sub-seasonal forecast products on the DWD climate prediction website www.dwd.de/climatepredictions. In March 2020, this climate service was published with decadal predictions for the coming years; sub-seasonal and seasonal predictions for the coming weeks and months will follow.

The user-oriented evaluation and design of this climate service has been developed in close cooperation with users from various sectors at workshops of the German MiKlip project and will be consistent across all time scales. The website offers maps, time series and tables of ensemble mean and probabilistic predictions in combination with the prediction skill for 1-year and 5-year means/ sums of temperature and precipitation for different regions (World, Europe, Germany, German regions).

For Germany, the statistical downscaling EPISODES was applied to reach high spatial resolution required by several climate data users. Decadal predictions were statistically recalibrated in order to adjust bias, drift and standard deviation and optimize ensemble spread. We used the MSESS and RPSS to evaluate the skill of climate predictions in comparison to reference predictions, e.g. ‘observed climatology’ or ‘uninitialized climate projections’ (which are both applied by users until now as an alternative to climate predictions). The significance was tested via bootstraps.

Within the ‘basic climate predictions’ section, a user-oriented traffic light indicates whether regional-mean climate predictions are significantly better (green), not significantly different (yellow) or significantly worse (red) than reference predictions. Within the ‘expert climate predictions’ section, prediction maps show per grid box the prediction itself (via the color of dots) and its skill (via the size of dots representing the skill categories of the traffic light). The co-development of this climate prediction application with users from different sectors strongly improves the comprehensibility and applicability by users in their daily work.

In addition to sub-seasonal and seasonal predictions, plans for future extensions of this climate service include multi-year seasonal predictions, e.g. 5-year summer or winter means, combined products for climate predictions and climate projections, further user-oriented, extreme or large-scale variables, e.g. ENSO, or high-resolution applications for German cities based on statistically downscaled predictions.

How to cite: Paxian, A., Reinhardt, K., Mannig, B., Isensee, K., Krug, A., Pankatz, K., Fröhlich, K., Tivig, M., Lorenz, P., and Früh, B.: The DWD climate prediction website, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3236, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3236, 2021.

EGU21-5437 | vPICO presentations | CL2.5 | Highlight

Developing prototype decadal climate prediction services

Nick Dunstone, Panos Athanasiadis, Louis-Philippe Caron, Francisco Doblas-Reyes, Barbara Frueh, Leon Hermanson, Julia Lockwood, Klaus Pankatz, Andreas Paxian, Katja Reinhardt, Adam Scaife, Doug Smith, Balakrishnan Solaraju, Hazel Thornton, and Eirini Tsartsali

Here we present an overview of results emerging from a project to develop prototype decadal climate prediction services, funded by the EU Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). The field of interannual to decadal climate prediction has matured rapidly over the last ~15 years, becoming an established part of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) process with multi-model decadal climate predictions made in CMIP5 and CMIP6 (DCPP MIP). It has further been highlighted by the recent creation of the WMO Lead Centre for Annual-to-Decadal Climate Prediction. Whilst these activities have led to rapid development in our understanding of decadal climate predictability and mechanisms driving global and regional annual to decadal climate variability, the creation of useful climate services on this timescale is still in its infancy.

This EU funded project was designed to start to address decadal climate services and brings together many of the key European institutions involved in decadal climate predictions from four different countries: Germany (DWD), Italy (CMCC), Spain (BSC) and the UK (Met Office). Each partner is working with a different sector: infrastructure, energy, agriculture and insurance where they have been developing a prototype decadal climate service in partnership with a user in that sector. Here we report on the progress made so far and highlight a number of key lessons learned along the way. These include the use of both large multi-model ensembles and more predictable large-scale circulation indicators in order to give skilful regional predictions of user relevant variables. We also describe the development of a common product format to present forecast information to users, this contains essential information about the current probabilistic forecast, retrospective forecast skill and reliability.

How to cite: Dunstone, N., Athanasiadis, P., Caron, L.-P., Doblas-Reyes, F., Frueh, B., Hermanson, L., Lockwood, J., Pankatz, K., Paxian, A., Reinhardt, K., Scaife, A., Smith, D., Solaraju, B., Thornton, H., and Tsartsali, E.: Developing prototype decadal climate prediction services, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5437, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5437, 2021.

CL2.6 – Energy and moisture cycles: interactions and changes with large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulation

EGU21-360 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

The Lorenz Energy Cycle: Trends and the Impact of Modes of Climate Variability

Qiyun Ma, Valerio Lembo, and Christian Franzke

The atmospheric circulation is driven by heat transport from the tropics to the polar regions, implying energy conversions between available potential and kinetic energy through various mechanisms. The processes of energy transformations can be quantitatively investigated in the global climate system through the Lorenz energy cycle formalism. In this study, we examine these variations and the impacts of modes of climate variability on the Lorenz energy cycle by using reanalysis data from the Japanese Meteorological Agency (JRA-55). We show that the atmospheric circulation is overall becoming more energetic and efficient. For instance, we find a statistically significant trend in the eddy available potential energy, especially in the transient eddy available potential energy in the Southern Hemisphere. We find significant trends in the conversion rates between zonal available potential and kinetic energy, consistent with an expansion of the Hadley cell, and in the conversion rates between eddy available potential and kinetic energy, suggesting an increase in mid-latitudinal baroclinic instability. We also show that planetary-scale waves dominate the stationary eddy energy, while synoptic-scale waves dominate the transient eddy energy with a significant increasing trend. Our results suggest that interannual variability of the Lorenz energy cycle is determined by modes of climate variability. We find that significant global and hemispheric energy fluctuations are caused by the El Nino-Southern Oscillation, the Arctic Oscillation, the Southern Annular Mode, and the meridional temperature gradient over the Southern Hemisphere.

How to cite: Ma, Q., Lembo, V., and Franzke, C.: The Lorenz Energy Cycle: Trends and the Impact of Modes of Climate Variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-360, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-360, 2021.

EGU21-406 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Observed Long-Term Trends of the Atmospheric Circulation and of Dry and Moist Static Energies

Christian Franzke and Nili Harnik

The atmospheric circulation response to global warming is an important problem which is theoretically still not well understood. This is a particular problem since climate model simulations provide uncertain, and at times contradictory, projections of future climate. In particular, it is still unclear how a warmer and moister atmosphere will affect the atmospheric circulation and mid-latitude storms. Here we perform a trend analysis of various atmospheric circulation measures and of the budgets of dry and moist static energy transports, which will contribute to our understanding of the role of moisture in circulation changes. Our analysis is based on the JRA-55 reanalysis data covering the period 1958 through 2018 for both winter and summer seasons. We focus our analysis on zonal mean quantities for the full latitudinal circles as well as for the Atlantic and Pacific sectors.

We find significant trends in zonal wind, eddy kinetic energy, Eady growth rate, diabatic heating rates, and specific humidity. The zonal wind changes appear to be in thermal wind balance. We also find that the increase in specific humidity is intensifying the trend in eddy moist static energy transport when compared with eddy dry static energy transport. Since band-pass filtered eddy moist static energy transports are related to storm tracks this suggests that increasing moisture in the atmosphere is contributing to the intensification and meridional shifts of storm tracks. Furthermore, our results suggest that global warming predominantly enhance heat fluxes and to a lesser extend momentum fluxes.

How to cite: Franzke, C. and Harnik, N.: Observed Long-Term Trends of the Atmospheric Circulation and of Dry and Moist Static Energies, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-406, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-406, 2021.

EGU21-436 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Arctic freshwater cycle and the interaction with the North Atlantic

Xia Lin, François Massonnet, Chunxue Yang, Vincenzo Artale, Vincenzo de Toma, and Arun Rana

This study aims to evaluate to what extent atmospheric, land and ocean related datasets in the Climate Data Store are suitable for performing studies on the Arctic freshwater cycle and the interaction with the North Atlantic. The Arctic freshwater cycle is analyzed on the mean, seasonal cycle, and the trend of the atmospheric terms, runoff, ocean liquid and sea-ice freshwater storage over Arctic Ocean (AO) and transport through the Fram Strait (FS), Bering Strait (BS), Barents Sea branch (BSB) and Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA).

It is found that (1) the annual mean freshwater input to the AO is dominated by the river runoff (38%), inflow through BS (30%), and net precipitation (24%) and the total freshwater export from the AO is dominated by the outflow through the FS (53%) and CAA (34%). Though the net precipitation over ocean, runoff from drainage basin and seawater and sea-ice freshwater transport through the BS are close to other studies, the much lower annual mean ocean freshwater exports from the FS and CAA contribute to the imbalance of the AO freshwater cycle based on ORAS5 reanalysis data. (2) The precipitation and total water column over the ocean and land are largest in summer, while the evaporation is smallest over ocean and largest over land in summer. The total runoff in June is largest and is modulated by the snow melting though the net precipitation is the smallest. AO liquid freshwater storage increases from May to September with a peak value in September. The ocean liquid freshwater imports from the BS and exports from CAA show much larger values in summer, while the sea-ice freshwater exports in summer is strongest for the CAA but weakest for the FS. The weakest sea-ice freshwater export from the FS is consistent with other studies though the values are much smaller. (3) Both the precipitation and evaporation over the AO increased significantly, while over land only the evaporation increased and the net precipitation decreased during both 1979-2018 and 1990-2018. The moisture convergence over land increased significantly during 1979-2018 and the total water volume over the ocean and land has also increased. The annual mean runoff decreased during 1979-2018 and is much improved with a lower trend from ERA5-land outputs than ERA5. The annual mean AO freshwater storage as sea ice decreased, while the annual mean ocean liquid freshwater storage increased during both 1979-2018 and 1990-2018. 

It is indicated that (1) the usage of ERA5 reanalysis data is recommended for the atmospheric freshwater cycle, and ERA5-land data for runoff, while freshwater transport from the FS and CAA are not well represented on ORAS5 reanalysis data. (2) The trends of AO liquid and sea-ice freshwater transport are very sensitive to the chosen period and quite uncertain. Extreme care must be exercised when using ORAS5 data to study the AO freshwater transport. (3) The use of ORAS5 ocean products is not recommended before 1990, as some adjustment seems to occur during the 1979-1990 period. 

How to cite: Lin, X., Massonnet, F., Yang, C., Artale, V., de Toma, V., and Rana, A.: Arctic freshwater cycle and the interaction with the North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-436, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-436, 2021.

EGU21-2057 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Linkage of Arctic Sea Ice and Energy Transport

Ines Höschel, Dörthe Handorf, Christoph Jacobi, and Johannes Quaas

The loss of Arctic sea ice as a consequence of global warming is changing the forcing of the atmospheric large-scale circulation.  Areas not covered with sea ice anymore may act as an additional heat source.  Associated changes in Rossby wave propagation can initiate tropospheric and stratospheric pathways of Arctic - Mid-latitude linkages.  These pathways have the potential to impact on the large-scale energy transport into the Arctic.  On the other hand, studies show that the large-scale circulation contributes to Arctic warming by poleward transport of moist static energy. This presentation shows results from research within the Transregional Collaborative Research Center “ArctiC Amplification: Climate Relevant Atmospheric and SurfaCe Processes, and Feedback Mechanisms (AC)3” funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  Using the ERA interim and ERA5 reanalyses the meridional moist static energy transport during high ice and low ice periods is compared.  The investigation discriminates between contributions from planetary and synoptic scale.  Special emphasis is put on the seasonality of the modulations of the large-scale energy transport.

How to cite: Höschel, I., Handorf, D., Jacobi, C., and Quaas, J.: Linkage of Arctic Sea Ice and Energy Transport, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2057, 2021.

EGU21-8187 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Quantifying the ITCZ using wind convergence

Lea Elsemüller and Bedartha Goswami

The intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) expresses itself as a band of strong convection around the equator with associated heavy precipitation. The ITCZ migrates annually to the warmer hemisphere, and the extent to which it ventures away from the equator varies from year to year and across the different oceans and continents. These variations drastically affect rainfall and droughts in the equatorial area and beyond.Till now, various approaches have been proposed to quantify the ITCZ, e.g. based on maximum precipitation or energy budgets. However, a robust quantifier of the actual convergence of surface winds around the equator is still lacking. Here, we propose to quantify ITCZ mid position with a fundamental and intuitive definition using surface wind data and wind convergence only. We use surface wind data from ERA5 reanalysis at 0.25 degree grid resolution as a proxy for calculating the ITCZ mid position on a global scale. Given the u and v components of the wind we calculate the convergence of the windfields around the equator between 20° North and 20° South. We define the latitudinal ITCZ mid position as the maximum convergence on each longitude. We then validate our approach by comparing it to the ITCZ location as given by existing ITCZ position proxies. We also look at characteristics of the ITCZ width to learn more about the influence of wind fields on the extent of the ITCZ. Our results reveal the interannual variability and trends in the ITCZ in the last half century. It also highlights the different characteristics of the ITCZ over the different oceans and continents.

How to cite: Elsemüller, L. and Goswami, B.: Quantifying the ITCZ using wind convergence, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8187, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8187, 2021.

EGU21-13976 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Hemispheric shift of the zonal mean ITCZ during the last deglaciation

Chetankumar Jalihal, Uwe Mikolajewicz, and Marie-Luise Kapsch

The zonal-annual mean inter-hemispheric convergence zone (ITCZ) is located in the northern hemisphere in the modern climate. A transient simulation of the last deglaciation using the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM), suggests that the ITCZ was located in the southern hemisphere 14 kyrs ago. This shift is due to a substantial cooling of the northern hemisphere relative the southern hemisphere, after the release of melt water pulse 1a. The ITCZ compensates for these changes in the surface temperature by shifting south, thereby leading to a northward atmospheric heat transport away from the southern hemisphere. Along with the southward shift, the intensity of the precipitation within the ITCZ decreases. These changes in the intensity of precipitation can be explained by using a framework based on the moist static energy budget. We find that these changes are primarily related to the changes in the large-scale vertical motion of the atmosphere in the tropics. This affects the vertical transport of the moist static energy, and hence total gross moist stability (TGMS). 

How to cite: Jalihal, C., Mikolajewicz, U., and Kapsch, M.-L.: Hemispheric shift of the zonal mean ITCZ during the last deglaciation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13976, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13976, 2021.

EGU21-14854 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

The energy budget of the tropical band in future climate 

David Ferreira and Roberta D'Agostino

The atmospheric circulation is expected to change in response to anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Both theory and model simulations of future climate suggest that the tropical overturning will weaken, with a weaker Hadley Circulation ascent, while the stratification of moist static energy (MSE) will strengthen. These two changes have opposite effects on the energy balance of the deep tropics. In the unperturbed system, the equatorward convergence of the mean flow in the lower troposphere (i.e. at low MSE) is compensated by a divergence in the upper troposphere (i.e. at high MSE), resulting in a net lateral export of MSE out of the region of ascent.

The weakening of the circulation in a future warmer climate would weaken the export of MSE while the strengthening of the stratification -- an increase of the MSE contrast between the upper and lower branches -- would reinforce it. However, previous studies suggest that these two effects do not exactly cancel out. A neglected element in this picture is the primary driver of these changes: due to the long-wave trapping by higher COconcentration, the tropical atmosphere will also receive more energy at the top and bottom (an increased Net Energy Input, NEI).

In this study, we attempt to reconcile changes in the circulation, stratification and NEI under climate change. Specifically, we investigate 1) to which extent the effects of circulation and stratification changes on the MSE budget compensate and 2) if inclusion of the NEI changes brings the MSE budget closer to equilibrium.

To address these questions, we compute the Gross Moist Stability in a series of simulations from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 archive. To test our understanding of the MSE budget, we consider both a future climate scenario (RCP8.5) and the mid-Holocene (6000 A.D). For the future climate, we show that, although there is a rough balance by the circulation and stratification effects, inclusion of the NEI term significantly improves the closure of the MSE budget in the deep tropics. The mid-Holocene case is, however, fundamentally different as both stratification and circulation weaken, reinforcing their effects on the MSE export. In this case, inclusion of the NEI term is critical to establish the MSE balance of the deep tropics.

Both cases underline that a three-term balance (between changes in circulation, MSE stratification and NEI) provides a robust description of the deep tropics MSE budget under climate change.

How to cite: Ferreira, D. and D'Agostino, R.: The energy budget of the tropical band in future climate , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14854, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14854, 2021.

EGU21-15234 | vPICO presentations | CL2.6

Volcanic impact on the tropical hydrological cycle 

Roberta D'Agostino and Claudia Timmreck

The impact of volcanic forcing on tropical precipitation is investigated in a new set of sensitivity experiments within Max Planck Institute Grand Ensemble framework. Five ensembles are created, each containing 100 realizations for an idealized tropical volcanic eruption located at the equator, analogous the Mt. Pinatubo eruption, with emissions covering a range of 2.5 - 40 Tg S. The ensembles provide an excellent database to disentangle the influence of volcanic forcing on regional monsoons and tropical hydroclimate over the wide spectrum of the climate internal variability. Monsoons are generally weaker during the two years after volcanic eruptions and their weakening is a function of emissions: the strongest the volcanic eruption, the weakest are the land monsoons. The extent of rain belt is also affected: the monsoon area is overall narrower than the unperturbed control simulation. While the position of main ascents does not change, the idealised tropical volcanic eruption supports the shrinking of Hadley Cell's ascent and the narrowing of the ITCZ. We investigate this behavior by analysing the changes in Hadley/Walker circulation, net energy input and energy budget to find analogies/differences with global warming.

How to cite: D'Agostino, R. and Timmreck, C.: Volcanic impact on the tropical hydrological cycle , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15234, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15234, 2021.

CL2.8 – Phenology and seasonality in climate change

Phenological shifts in plants greatly affect biotic interactions and lead to multiple feedbacks to the climate system. Increases in growing-season length under warmer climates are expected to drive changes in water, nutrient, and energy fluxes as well as enhancing ecosystem carbon uptake. Yet, future trajectories of growing-season lengths remain highly uncertain because the intrinsic and extrinsic factors triggering autumn leaf senescence, including lagged effects of spring and summer productivity, are poorly understood. Here, we use 434,226 spring leaf-out and autumn leaf senescence observations of temperate trees from Central Europe between 1948 and 2015 to test the effect of seasonal photosynthetic activity on leaf senescence, thereby exploring the extent to which growing-season lengths are internally regulated by constraints on productivity. We found that spring and summer productivity was a critical driver of autumn phenology, with earlier leaf senescence in years with high seasonal photosynthetic activity. Our new process-based model, incorporating information on growing-season photosynthesis, increased the accuracy of existing autumn phenology models by 22–61%. Furthermore, the physiological constraint of growing-season photosynthesis reversed the predictions of autumn phenology over the rest of the century. While current phenology models predict that leaf senescence will occur 7–19 days later by the end of the 21st century, we estimate that leaf senescence will, in fact, advance by 3–6 days. Our results reveal important constraints on future growing-season lengths and the carbon uptake potential of temperate trees and enhance our capacity to forecast long-term changes in ecosystem functioning, which is critical to improve our understanding of Earth System dynamics in response to climate change.

How to cite: Zohner, C.: The effect of growing-season productivity on autumn phenology in temperate trees, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9937, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9937, 2021.

EGU21-16132 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

The penalty of spring frost damages from earliest to latest possible leaf-out timings in temperate forest trees

Frederik Baumgarten, Arthur Gessler, and Yann Vitasse

The timing of a tree's leaf emergence represents a trade-off between maximising competition for resources (e.g. light, nutrients) and avoiding freezing damage. Global warming has significantly advanced the date of the last frost events in temperate zones, but in parallel has also shifted the onset of vegetation in spring over the last decades. Thus, the risk of frost damage to plants has not necessarily decreased, depending on geographical location and species. In this study we aim to assess the overall impact of frost damage for saplings vitality. We used saplings of 4 temperate, deciduous tree species (Prunus avium, Carpinus betulus, Quercus petrea and Fagus sylvatica) and artificially altered the leaf-out date by applying a warming or cooling treatment before the natural leaf-out to reflect the whole range of possible leaf-out dates. Once leaves emerged, we simulated a natural frost event, damaging all or half of the new leaves. We then analyzed how fast the different species recovered depending on leaf-out timing in terms of recovery time (time until second flush), growth (biomass and heigth) and non-structural carbohydrate reserves (NSC) in relation to non-frozen control plants. By  quantifying the penalty of frost damages in late spring this experiment aims to specify the risk of a species’ strategy to time spring phenology.

How to cite: Baumgarten, F., Gessler, A., and Vitasse, Y.: The penalty of spring frost damages from earliest to latest possible leaf-out timings in temperate forest trees, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16132, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16132, 2021.

EGU21-5 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Phenology studies need to account for tissue temperature, not air

Marc Peaucelle, Josep Peñuelas, and Hans Verbeeck

Plant phenology is mainly driven by temperature in extratropical ecosystems. Contrasting responses of foliar phenology to climatic warming, however, have been reported in recent decades, raising important questions about the role of other environmental constraints, especially light. A striking and common aspect to past phenological studies is that all analyses have been solely based on air temperature. In fact, temperatures differ substantially between plant tissues and the air, because plants absorb and radiate energy. Using a simple model of bud energy balance, we explore how using bud instead of air temperature could change our interpretation of the phenological response to warming and explain several observed responses of phenology to temperature and light. Not accounting for the real temperature of plant tissues represents a real gap in phenology studies. Field observations of plant tissues temperature as well as experiments are needed for accurately assessing the response of vegetation to climate change.

How to cite: Peaucelle, M., Peñuelas, J., and Verbeeck, H.: Phenology studies need to account for tissue temperature, not air, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5, 2021.

EGU21-6761 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

If you work with phenology, you work with bud cold hardiness dynamics

Al Kovaleski and Jason Londo

Budbreak is one of the most observed and studied phenological phases in perennial plants. Historically, two effects of temperature are used to model budbreak: the accumulation of heat units (forcing); and the accumulation of time spent at low temperatures (chilling). These two effects have a well-established negative correlation: the more chilling, the less forcing is required to reach budbreak. However, prediction of budbreak remains a challenge, as even artificial warming experiments do not match changes in observed budbreak timing during the past few decades of climate warming. The cold hardiness of buds is, however, largely ignored in estimations of timing to budbreak. Cold hardiness level fluctuates throughout the winter as temperatures change, constantly altering the initiation point of deacclimation. During budbreak assays, cold hardiness loss is extremely slow (low deacclimation rate) at low chill accumulation, and increases to a maximum at high chill accumulation. By standardizing deacclimation rates for each species based on the maximum observed, a deacclimation potential describes dormancy fulfillment. Our studies show that deacclimation rates vary at different temperatures demonstrating the effect of forcing is non-linear. We show that the concept of variable chilling requirements for satisfying dormancy (high chill vs. low chill) is largely erroneous and instead these phenotypes reflect previously unmeasured differences between species or genotypes regarding the interaction between cold hardiness state and deacclimation potential. Our studies show that forcing responses (maximum rates of deacclimation) are normally distributed within a species, and are a heritable trait. Three effects of temperature are thus necessary to describe contemporary phenology patterns as well as predict future impacts of climate change: the accumulation of chill, the forcing temperature response, and the cold hardiness of buds.

How to cite: Kovaleski, A. and Londo, J.: If you work with phenology, you work with bud cold hardiness dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6761, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6761, 2021.

EGU21-8272 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Where do the buds get their water from during budburst? New perspectives from temperate forest species using water stable isotopes

Paula Martín Gómez, Jérôme Ogée, Régis Burlett, Adrià Barbeta, Nicolas Devert, Sabrina Dubois, Bastien Frejaville, and Lisa Wingate

During winter dormancy in deciduous species, water stops flowing in the xylem and buds become isolated from the stem xylem conduits by a physical barrier made of callose deposits. During bud break, the plant builds new vascular connections between the growing buds and the xylem to support sap flow and transpiration in the developing leaves. However, little is known about the exact timing when these new vascular connections are made, or about the origin of the water supporting bud swelling prior to bud break. This information is particularly limited in forest tree species. We aimed to clarify the origin of the water entering the buds at different developmental stages in temperate forest tree species using water stable isotope tracing techniques to track water movement between soil, stem and buds. More specifically, we developed a method to collect sap water separately from water in other stem tissues (Barbeta et al. 2020). At different leaf phenological stages during the 2018 growing season, we collected soil, stem, bud and leaf samples from 5 adult trees and 3 species (Fagus sylvatica, Quercus robur, Pinus pinaster) growing in a riparian forest in Southwest France. We estimated the relative water content in each sample by extracting bulk water by cryogenic vacuum distillation, and also extracted sap water from stem samples using our new method. All water samples were then analysed for their stable isotope composition (δ18O, δ2H). These results, complemented by some additional labelling experiments, provide key information about the timing of hydraulic reconnection between the buds and the xylem and about the source of water supporting bud swelling and bud break, demonstrating the usefulness of water stable isotope measurements to understand water transport pathways during bud development and canopy leaf out.

 

Reference:

Barbeta, A., Burlett, R., Martín-Gómez, P., Fréjaville, B., Devert, N., Wingate, L., Domec, J.-C., et al. (2020). Evidence for distinct isotopic composition of sap and tissue water in tree stems: Consequences for plant water source identification. BioRxiv, 2020.06.18.160002.

How to cite: Martín Gómez, P., Ogée, J., Burlett, R., Barbeta, A., Devert, N., Dubois, S., Frejaville, B., and Wingate, L.: Where do the buds get their water from during budburst? New perspectives from temperate forest species using water stable isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8272, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8272, 2021.

EGU21-15904 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Isotopically labelled water - A valuable tracer to track initiation and progress of bud dormancy in temperate trees

Manuel Gabriel Walde, Matthias Saurer, and Yann Vitasse

Leaf-out of deciduous trees is regulated by a set of environmental factors such as cool temperatures during winter-dormancy (chilling), warm spring temperatures (forcing), and daylength (photoperiod), with complex interactions between these factors. Teasing apart these different factors in situ is challenging as no visible changes occurs during the dormancy phase. Manipulating these factors in climate chamber experiments may overcome this issue but may not reflect how they truly interact in natural conditions. Previous researches suggested that bud meristems are disconnected from the xylem flow during endodormancy and that the connection become progressively restored once exposed to a certain duration of chilling. Here we developed a new method using isotopically labelled water (D2O) to quantify the amount of water that can reach buds during the whole dormancy till budburst for 5 different species (Acer pseudoplatanus, Carpinus betulus, Fagus sylvatica, Quercus petraea, Tilia cordata).

In detail, we harvested twig cuttings from leaf fall to budburst (~every two weeks, 12 times) of these species from two different sites (about 5°C of difference) and placed them into labelled water during 24 h at constant light and 20°C. Buds were then cut and water content extracted to quantify δD. Thus, tracing back the water flow into the buds by the amount of D2O taken up. In parallel a subset of twigs was left in the room at 20°C to assess the time to budburst as a proxy for dormancy depth. Analyses of the data are ongoing and preliminary results show progressive increase of water uptake after induction of winter dormancy until budburst as chilling duration increased. Further, we also found distinct differences between species whereas Carpinus betulus showed the highest and Tilia cordata the lowest label uptake during winter dormancy. Furthermore, individuals growing at higher elevation took up less label indicating a stronger dormancy at lower winter temperatures. In summary, we think that our method seems a valuable tool to track quantitative changes in dormancy depth of temperate species especially, in combination with investigations on the molecular level such as sugars or hormones during winter-dormancy.

How to cite: Walde, M. G., Saurer, M., and Vitasse, Y.: Isotopically labelled water - A valuable tracer to track initiation and progress of bud dormancy in temperate trees, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15904, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15904, 2021.

EGU21-6849 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Winter leaf reddening phenomenon: the long-term track of PRI and phenological changes in a temperate Japanese cypress forest at Kiryu Japan.

Siyu Chen, Yoshiko Kosugi, Linjie Jiao, Tatsuro Nakaji, Hibiki Noda, Kouki Hikosaka, and Kenlo Nasahara

Winter leaf reddening is a phenomenon that evergreen species’ leaf color changes into red resulting from the accumulation of red pigments before or during winter, which persists for several months before dissipating with springtime warming. Among the many hypotheses about the winter leaf reddening, photoprotection is currently the favored hypothesis. Several studies focused on leaf reddening in angiosperms species. Yet, little researches concerned about leaf reddening in gymnosperms species. In gymnosperms, a kind of xanthophyll pigment rhodoxanthin was reported to play an important role. However, the xanthophyll cycle is the main protection mechanism of plants to deal with excessive light energy.

To track the winter leaf reddening phenomenon, we utilized the carotenoid-based vegetation index, the photochemical reflectance index (PRI), which is sensitive to changes in carotenoid pigments (e. g. xanthophyll pigments) in live foliage, as a tool to reflect the invisible phenology of photosynthesis by assessing carotenoid pigment dynamics. We used the CO2 flux data and the micrometeorological data collected from the temperate Japanese cypress forest from 2014 to 2019. We also made use of the digital camera to monitor the canopy phenology changes from 2016 to 2019. The digital camera took photos in 3 hours intervals with 3 different ROI (region of interest), the RGB channels of image data were extracted to calculate the RGB chromatic coordinates and the Red-Green vegetation index (RGVI).

Our findings demonstrated that air temperature reached the lowest point had a one-month lag in the time than that of PAR. The imbalance between light energy absorption and light energy utilization might activate the photoprotection mechanism. The change in light use efficiency (LUE) might confirm this conjecture. LUE reached its peak at the end of December and then dropped sharply. It suggested the photoprotection mechanism was activated. The RGVI fluctuation showed the seasonal changes with that of PRI almost in contrast. PRI was highly correlated with RGVI (R=-0.806928034317071 in Pearson’s correlation test). It suggested that the winter leaf reddening phenomenon caused the decline of PRI. Further, the PRI and RGVI both were highly correlated with air temperature and PAR. Based on current observations, there are still many unclear mechanisms. In the future, we will try to better explain the mechanism of winter reddening with a new set of experiments.

 

Keyword: winter leaf reddening, Japanese cypress, photochemical reflectance index (PRI), Red-Green vegetation index (RGVI), phenological analysis, digital camera

How to cite: Chen, S., Kosugi, Y., Jiao, L., Nakaji, T., Noda, H., Hikosaka, K., and Nasahara, K.: Winter leaf reddening phenomenon: the long-term track of PRI and phenological changes in a temperate Japanese cypress forest at Kiryu Japan., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6849, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6849, 2021.

EGU21-671 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Grapevine Phenology in Four Portuguese Wine Regions: Modeling and Predictions

Samuel Reis, Helder Fraga, Cristina Carlos, José Silvestre, José Eiras-Dias, Pedro Rodrigues, and João A. Santos

Phenological models applied to grapevines are valuable tools to assist in the decision of cultural practices related to winegrowers and winemakers. The two-parameter sigmoid phenological model was used to estimate the three main phenological stages of the grapevine development, i.e., budburst, flowering, and veraison. This model was calibrated and validated with phenology data for 51 grapevine varieties distributed in four wine regions in Portugal (Lisboa, Douro, Dão, and Vinhos Verdes). Meteorological data for the selected sites were also used. Hence, 153 model calibrations (51 varieties × 3 phenological stages) and corresponding parameter estimations were carried out based on an unprecedented comprehensive and systematized dataset of phenology in Portugal. For each phenological stage, the centroid of the estimated parameters was subsequently used, and three generalized sigmoid models were constructed (budburst: d =−0.6, e = 8.6; flowering: d = −0.6, e = 13.7; veraison: d = −0.5, e = 13.2). Centroid parameters show high performance for approximately 90% of the varieties and can thereby be used instead of variety-specific parameters. Overall, the RMSE (root-mean-squared-error) is < 7 days, while the EF (efficiency coefficient) is > 0.5. Additionally, according to other studies, the predictive capacity of the models for budburst remains lower than for flowering or veraison. Furthermore, the F-forcing parameter (thermal accumulation) was evaluated for the Lisboa wine region, where the sample size is larger, and for the varieties with model efficiency equal to or greater than 0.5. A ranking and categorization of the varieties in early, intermediate, and late varieties was subsequently undertaken on the basis of F values. In this way, these results of the present study will be incorporated on a web platform, where the sigmoid model must convey valuable information regarding the development/evolution of the vineyard with short-term predictions.

Keywords: grapevine; phenology modeling; sigmoid model; wine regions; short-term predictions; Portugal

How to cite: Reis, S., Fraga, H., Carlos, C., Silvestre, J., Eiras-Dias, J., Rodrigues, P., and A. Santos, J.: Grapevine Phenology in Four Portuguese Wine Regions: Modeling and Predictions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-671, 2021.

EGU21-5689 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

The shifting of climate types: manifestation to phenology and ecosystems structure

Gunta Kalvāne, Andis Kalvāns, Agrita Briede, Ilmārs Krampis, Dārta Kaupe, and Solvita Rūsiņa

According to the Köppen climate classification, almost the entire area of Latvia belongs to the same climate type, Dfb, which is characterized by humid continental climates with warm (sometimes hot) summers and cold winters.  In the last decades whether conditions on the western coast of Latvia more characterized by temperate maritime climates. In this area there has been a transition (and still ongoing) to the climate type Cfb.

Temporal and spatial changes of temperature and precipitation regime have been examined in whole territory to identify the breaking point of climate type shifts. We used two type of climatological data sets: gridded daily temperature from the E-OBS data set version 21.0e (Cornes et al., 2018) and direct observations from meteorological stations (data source: Latvian Environment, Geology and Meteorology Centre). The temperature and precipitation regime have changed significantly in the last century - seasonal and regional differences can be observed in the territory of Latvia.

We have digitized and analysed more than 47 thousand phenological records, fixed by volunteers in period 1970-2018. Study has shown that significant seasonal changes have taken place across the Latvian landscape due to climate change (Kalvāne and Kalvāns, 2021). The largest changes have been recorded for the unfolding (BBCH11) and flowering (BBCH61) phase of plants – almost 90% of the data included in the database demonstrate a negative trend. The winter of 1988/1989 may be considered as breaking point, it has been common that many phases have begun sooner (particularly spring phases), while abiotic autumn phases have been characterized by late years.

Study gives an overview aboutclimate change (also climate type shift) impacts on ecosystems in Latvia, particularly to forest and semi-natural grasslands and temporal and spatial changes of vegetation structure and distribution areas.

This study was carried out within the framework of the Impact of Climate Change on Phytophenological Phases and Related Risks in the Baltic Region (No. 1.1.1.2/VIAA/2/18/265) ERDF project and the Climate change and sustainable use of natural resources institutional research grant of the University of Latvia (No. AAP2016/B041//ZD2016/AZ03).

Cornes, R. C., van der Schrier, G., van den Besselaar, E. J. M. and Jones, P. D.: An Ensemble Version of the E-OBS Temperature and Precipitation Data Sets, J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 123(17), 9391–9409, doi:10.1029/2017JD028200, 2018.

Kalvāne, G. and Kalvāns, A.(2021): Phenological trends of multi-taxonomic groups in Latvia, 1970-2018, Int. J. Biometeorol., doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00484-020-02068-8, 2021.

How to cite: Kalvāne, G., Kalvāns, A., Briede, A., Krampis, I., Kaupe, D., and Rūsiņa, S.: The shifting of climate types: manifestation to phenology and ecosystems structure, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5689, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5689, 2021.

EGU21-10272 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Development of a new phenological model based on the carbon balance of tree in boreal conifers

Annie Deslauriers, Fabrizio Carteni, Lorena Balducci, Alain Dupont, and Stefano Mazzoleni

Traditional phenological models use the concepts of chilling and thermal forcing (temperature sum or degree-days) to predict buds break. Even if new model formulations get more sophisticated with time, the bases of phenological model still rely on the effect of the time of chilling and forcing temperature in interaction, or not, with photoperiod. Because of the increasing impact of climate or other related biotic or abiotic stressors, a model with more biological support is urgently needed in order to accurately predict bud break. We have developed and calibrated a new mechanistic model that is based on the physiological processes taking place before and during budbreak in several conifers species. This model describes the phenology and growth dynamics of a conifer branch as representative of the whole tree. As a general assumption, we assume that phenology will be driven by the carbon status, which is closely related to the annual cycle of dormancy – activity state through the year and to the environmental variables. The carbon balance of a branch was thus modelled i) from autumn to winter–when aboveground parts exhibit cold acclimation and dormancy– and ii) from winter to spring and summer –when deacclimation and growth resumption occurs. After being calibrated in a field experiment, the model was tested across a large area in Québec (Canada), based on observed phenological data. For the 20 field sites in Quebec, the model proved to be accurate in predicting the date of budbreak with an average error of ±3.8 days (R2=0.72). This model also allowed us to better understand the effects of winter and spring temperature on bud burst, offering new simulation perspectives under global warming and insect defoliation.

 

How to cite: Deslauriers, A., Carteni, F., Balducci, L., Dupont, A., and Mazzoleni, S.: Development of a new phenological model based on the carbon balance of tree in boreal conifers, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10272, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10272, 2021.

EGU21-12430 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Calibration of LgrassFlo, a new model of perennial grass phenology in response to temperature and photoperiod.

Simon Rouet, Jean-Louis Durand, Didier Combes, Abraham Escobar-Gutierrez, and Romain Barillot

In perennial grasses, the reproductive development encompasses several phenological events, such as apex induction, floral transition, heading and flowering, that deeply affect biomass production, forage quality and plant perenniality. Despite the importance of perennial grasses in agricultural systems and natural ecosystems, we still lack accurate models predicting the reproductive development and its consequences on plant growth and grassland management. Most of available models implements a fixed scheduling of the reproductive development expressed either in thermal time or in calendar time. The progressive completion of floral induction and the effects of environmental factors are generally poorly described. In addition, the vegetative and reproductive developments are represented as independent and successive phases. In the present work, we introduce the new model LgrassFlo, which simulates the reproductive development of perennial grasses in interaction with plant vegetative development and considering the effects of environmental conditions on floral induction.

LgrassFlo simulates the canopy as the dynamics of a collection of individual plants, each being composed of one or more tillers. The 3D description of leaf growth and tillering is based on a functional-structural plant model of perennial ryegrass (Lgrass). We developed a new model of floral induction describing the progression of the primary and secondary induction of each apex of the plant according to (i) the daily temperature, (ii) photoperiod and (iii) plant architecture. This model was coupled to Lgrass, the model ensemble being called LgrassFlo. During apex induction, LgrassFlo accounts for an increase in the rates of leaf primordia initiation and leaf elongation. After floral transition, we assume that the apex only initiates spikelet primordia and that internodes start to elongate. LgrassFlo simulates the date of floral transition, the final number of leaves and the heading date based on a 3D representation of plant architecture.

A specific experiment was carried out in order to calibrate LgrassFlo on data describing the vegetative and reproductive development of three Lolium perenne cultivars contrasted for their precocity and exposed to four inductive conditions in growth chambers. The first three conditions consisted in a period allowing for primary induction (low temperature – short day) followed by a period allowing for secondary induction (high temperature – long day), the two periods being spaced by a non-inductive period (high temperature - short day) of 0, 3 or 6 weeks. In the fourth condition, plants were not exposed to conditions allowing for the primary induction. A set of vegetative and reproductive parameters were estimated for each individual plant of the experiment. The parameter values were independent of the experimental treatment but showed a large genetic diversity both between and within varieties. Using this calibration, LgrassFlo satisfactorily predicted the observed diversity in final leaf number and heading date.

The present model is a step forward towards a better prediction of perennial grass phenology in actual and future climatic conditions. In this respect, the model is being currently used to simulate the observed genetic diversity in the heading date of several Lolium perenne cultivars grown in contrasted temperate climates over the last 15 years.

How to cite: Rouet, S., Durand, J.-L., Combes, D., Escobar-Gutierrez, A., and Barillot, R.: Calibration of LgrassFlo, a new model of perennial grass phenology in response to temperature and photoperiod., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12430, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12430, 2021.

EGU21-10298 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

False Spring over Europe: risk and uncertainties

Raul Zurita-Milla, Rens Vermeltfoort, Serkan Girgin, and Emma Izquierdo-Verdiguier

Understanding the impact of the climate crisis on our planet, and hence, on human and natural life, is a pressing but challenging scientific endeavor. Phenological studies help to build such an understanding by analyzing changes in the timing of biological events. Such changes are, in turn, linked to changes in the likelihood of experiencing false springs. Here we examine the risk and uncertainty of false springs over Europe using the extended spring indices models and the E-OBS weather dataset (1950-onwards). False spring uncertainty is evaluated using the full ensemble of 100 daily weather realizations that accompany the E-OBS dataset. Smart computing is used to handle this relatively large amount of gridded data. Our results show that changes in false spring risk are heterogeneous in space, with increasing risks mostly found in the mid-latitudes and decreasing risks mostly found at high and low latitudes. From 1950 until 1979, there was a substantial increase in false spring risk, whereas the change in false spring risk from 1980 onwards is negligible. Our results also show that false spring uncertainty is highest in western Europe. These results highlight the importance of considering temperature uncertainty in phenological modeling, especially when examining the risk of false springs.

 

How to cite: Zurita-Milla, R., Vermeltfoort, R., Girgin, S., and Izquierdo-Verdiguier, E.: False Spring over Europe: risk and uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10298, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10298, 2021.

The imprint of recent climate change on plant phenology has been the subject of several investigations during the last few decades. Results of such studies have repeatedly documented the advances of key phenological stages in spring. More recently, they have also shown that global warming has induced changes in temperature sensitivity and led to more uniform phenology across elevations. While awareness of trends in phenology undoubtedly contributes to inform ecosystem management, the provision of ecosystem services also necessitates knowledge and understanding of how spring phenology varies from year to year. For instance, in view of growing exposure of grassland ecosystems to summer drought, in Alpine countries forage production increasingly relies on exploiting at best spring growth, which in turn requires an accurate timing of field operations, depending on the progress of herbage development.

Employing long-term phenological observations on forest trees and grassland plants and weather records from Switzerland, in this contribution I examine year-to-year variations in spring phenology in light of anomalies in the seasonal mean temperature for the months of February to April, and reflect on how the latter can be related to number of dry days and associated temperature anomalies. Based on these findings and results from other studies, I discuss possible implications of future climate change for the variability of spring phenology.

How to cite: Calanca, P.: Dry days, associated temperature anomalies and inter-annual variations in spring phenology, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12512, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12512, 2021.

EGU21-2179 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

PEP725 a European phenological database

Hans Ressl, Helfried Scheifinger, Thomas Hübner, Anita Paul, and Markus Ungersböck

“Phenology – the timing of seasonal activities of animals and plants – is perhaps the simplest process in which to track changes in the ecology of species in response to climate change” (IPCC 2007).

PEP725, the Pan-European Phenological Database, is a European research infrastructure to promote and facilitate phenological research. Its main objective is to build up and maintain a European-wide phenological database with an open, unrestricted data access for science, research and education. So far, 20 European meteorological services and 6 partners from different phenological network operators have joined PEP725.

The PEP725 phenological data base (www.pep725.eu) now offers more than 12 million phenological observations, all of them classified according to the so called BBCH scale. The first datasets in PEP725 date back to 1868; however, there are only a few observations available until 1950. Having accepted the PEP725 data policy and finished the registration, the data download is quick and easy and can be done according to various criteria, e.g., by a specific plant or all data from one country. The integration of new data sets for future partners is also easy to perform due to the flexible structure of the PEP725 database as well as the classification of the observed plants via the so-called gss format (genus, species and subspecies).

PEP725 is funded by EUMETNET, the network of European meteorological services, ZAMG, who is the acting host for PEP, and the Austrian ministry of education, science and research.

The phenological data set has been growing by about 100000 observations per year. Also the number of user registrations has continually been increasing, amounting to 305 new users and more than 28000 downloads in 2020. The greatest number of users are found in China, followed by Germany and the US. To date we could count 78 reviewed publications based on the PEP725 data set with 18 in 2020 and a total of 9 published in Nature and one in Science.

The data base statistics demonstrate the great demand and potential of the PEP725 phenological data set, which urgently needs development including a facilitated access, gridded versions and near real time products to attract a greater range of users.

How to cite: Ressl, H., Scheifinger, H., Hübner, T., Paul, A., and Ungersböck, M.: PEP725 a European phenological database, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2179, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2179, 2021.

EGU21-16335 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Climate change in the vineyard: perspectives for pest species in the region of Neuchatel

Léonard Schneider, Valentin Comte, Baptiste Sneiders, and Martine Rebetez

Global warming increases the need for local climatic studies in wine-producing areas. Winegrowers have to develop strategies to adapt their activities to new climatic conditions and to their various effects on vine culture. Among them, distribution and population dynamics of pest species are likely to change. New species could reach the temperate regions, and some native species could create more damages than previously in the vineyards. In Western Europe, the distribution of the American grapevine leafhopper Scaphoideus titanus has been observed to shift northwards during the last decades (Boudon and Maixner 2007). Plurivoltin species such as the European grapevine moth Lobesia botrana could produce more generations per year (Gutierrez et al. 2018), creating potentially more damages on grapes. To help winegrowers, it is crucial to lead research at local scale, taking into account microclimatic specificities of the vineyards (Mozell and Thach 2014).

 

In this study, we examine temperature trends during the growing season in the region of Neuchatel and their potential impacts on major vine pest species. We focus on the American grapevine leafhopper and on the European grapevine moth. The American grapevine leafhopper is already established in the Lake Geneva area and could soon reach the Neuchatel area, while the European grapevine moth is already present in the Neuchatel vineyard. We use temperature data over the last 40 years (1980-2019) and two climatic scenarios to assess present suitability for pest development and the perspectives for the next decades.

 

 

REFERENCES

Boudon, E. & M. Maixner. 2007. Potential effects of climate change on distribution and activity of insect vectors of grapevine pathogens. In International and multi-disciplinary" Global warming, which potential impacts on the vineyards?".

Gutierrez, A. P., L. Ponti, G. Gilioli & J. Baumgärtner (2018) Climate warming effects on grape and grapevine moth (Lobesia botrana) in the Palearctic region. Agricultural and Forest Entomology, 20, 255-271.

Mozell, M. R. & L. Thach (2014) The impact of climate change on the global wine industry: Challenges & solutions. Wine Economics and Policy, 3, 81-89.

 

How to cite: Schneider, L., Comte, V., Sneiders, B., and Rebetez, M.: Climate change in the vineyard: perspectives for pest species in the region of Neuchatel, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16335, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16335, 2021.

EGU21-1103 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Modelling the spatial distribution of four decades of airborne birch pollen levels in Belgium using remotely sensed birch fraction maps

Willem Verstraeten, Nicolas Bruffaerts, Lucie Hoebeke, Rostislav Kouznetsov, Mikhail Sofiev, and Andy Delcloo

Emissions of biogenic aerosols such as allergenic pollen affect the public health badly. In combination with air pollution it puts additional distress on people already suffering from cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. In some European countries the prevalence of people with pollinosis is up to 40%. In Belgium, ~10% is sensitive for birch pollen. Patients suffering from pollinosis in Belgium lack access to detailed real-time spatial information and warnings on forthcoming pollen exposures. This is because the only pollen info is coming from five aerobiological stations which monitor off-line daily concentrations of airborne pollen from birches. Only two stations have almost four decades of observations, Brussels from 1982 on and De Haan from 1984 on. Chemistry Transport Models (CTM) can both quantify as well as forecast the spatial and temporal distribution of airborne birch pollen concentrations if the distributions of birch pollen emission sources over time are available.

Here we show the results of the modelled spatio-temporal distributions of almost four decades of birch pollen levels over Belgium using the CTM SILAM (http://silam.fmi.fi). This CTM is driven with the ERA5 meteorological reanalysis from ECMWF, and reconstructed birch tree fraction maps. A recent in-house birch map of Belgium derived from forest inventory data is combined with long-term series of the AVHRR-GIMMS3g NDVI to produce birch fraction maps for each year.

For the first time in Belgium, we present time series of modelled birch pollen levels by SILAM compared with daily observations from the aerobiological surveillance network for the period 1982-2019. Preliminary modelling results for Brussels show an overall R² value of 0.40 computed from modelled and observed daily birch pollen levels. The R² values for the individual birch pollen seasons may range from 0.10 to 0.82 with a median value of 0.53. For De Haan the R² values tend to be lower with the median seasonal value of 0.30. Temporal trends computed on the first results of the modelled daily values based on the Theil Sen slope and the Area Under the Curve (AUC) show a substantial increase of birch pollen levels for most parts in Belgium. This agrees well with literature reports.

How to cite: Verstraeten, W., Bruffaerts, N., Hoebeke, L., Kouznetsov, R., Sofiev, M., and Delcloo, A.: Modelling the spatial distribution of four decades of airborne birch pollen levels in Belgium using remotely sensed birch fraction maps, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1103, 2021.

Aeroallergens contribute a major climate change impact on human health since warming favours the production and advances the release of plant pollen. This goes in line with a widely observed advance of flowering in response to increasing temperatures. However, documented plant phenological changes vary with species traits, seasons, and sites. Nevertheless, the start and end of flowering dates are known to build a solid baseline for assessing the spatial and temporal patterns in pollen calendars. A closer look at the match/mismatch of flowering and start of pollen season dates reveals considerable differences which may be also indirectly linked to climate change. In this talk, we will present three perspectives related to (1) grassland land use, cutting regimes and agri-environment measures (AEM), (2) post-season pollen transport of an alpine Alnus species, as well as (3) a first climatology of pre-season long-range pollen transport to Bavaria. These selected examples underline the prominent role of land use/land cover (LULC) and pollen transport besides direct temperature mediated climate change effects on flowering for regional pollen calendars.

How to cite: Menzel, A. and Yuan, Y.: The role of land cover, land use, and atmospheric transport for the mismatch of flowering and atmospheric pollen seasonality, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2204, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2204, 2021.

EGU21-9184 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Investigations on spatial and vertical variations of airborne pollen in Sydney, Australia

Johanna Jetschni, Jane Al Kouba, Paul J. Beggs, and Susanne Jochner-Oette

The prevalence of pollen allergy is increasing worldwide, as is the proportion of people living in cities. Thus, there is an increasing importance to investigate pollen distribution across city districts. We conducted two sampling campaigns to investigate the spatial and temporal variation of airborne pollen in the Sydney metropolitan area and the vertical variation within a forest in north-western Sydney.

Spatial assessment of pollen deposition was made for eight weeks in the exceptionally dry summer in 2019/2020 using gravimetric samplers. These samplers were set up at ten locations characterised by different degrees of urbanisation and distance to the sea. We focussed on the most abundant pollen types and investigated statistical relationships with land use and meteorology. In addition, we compared our results with pollen data of previous years sampled at a pollen monitoring station located in north-western Sydney in a semi-rural environment. We measured vertical pollen concentrations in a native forest, which mostly consists of Eucalypt trees (family Myrtaceae) in north-western Sydney. A scaffolding was equipped with five portable volumetric pollen samplers installed at different heights (1, 4, 10, 16, 20.5 m above ground level (agl)). We measured pollen concentration every second hour between 9 am and 4 pm on a total of four days in January 2020. We compared concentrations between days, heights, and times of the day.

The most abundant pollen type registered within our sampling campaigns belonged to the family Myrtaceae. Grass pollen (Poaceae) was also detected, but in much smaller quantities which can be attributed to the drought and temporal setting of the campaign, which started in the post-peak period of a comparably weak pollen season associated with a smaller number of days with medical relevance (> 50 pollen grains/m3). Our data showed spatial variations between the ten locations, but no relationship with land use (grass and tree cover) and meteorology could be found. This suggests the influence of other factors such as long-range pollen transport or resuspension of pollen. In the forest, Myrtaceae concentrations varied between days, sampling height and time of the day: the highest concentration was recorded on the second day of measurement between 9 and 10 am at 10 m agl. Peak values were generally reached between 1 and 2 pm. Considering sampling height, concentrations were on average highest at 4 m agl. The location of pollen sources as well as meteorological conditions such as turbulence and variation in wind speed may be key determinants of small-scale differences of pollen concentrations.

The drought preceding this study did not only influence the length but also the strength of the pollen season. Data on vertical variations could support investigations related to turbulence, which is also responsible for resuspension processes.

How to cite: Jetschni, J., Al Kouba, J., Beggs, P. J., and Jochner-Oette, S.: Investigations on spatial and vertical variations of airborne pollen in Sydney, Australia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9184, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9184, 2021.

EGU21-15034 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Phenological phases of pollination related to climate change

Samuel Monnier, Michel Thibaudon, Jean-Pierre Besancenot, Charlotte Sindt, and Gilles Oliver

Knowledge:

Rising CO2 levels and climate change may be resulting in some shift in the geographical range of certain plant species, as well as in increased rate of photosynthesis. Many plants respond accordingly with increased growth and reproduction and possibly greater pollen yields, that could affect allergic diseases among other things.

The aim of this study is the evolution of aerobiological measurements in France for 25-30 years. This allows to follow the main phenological parameters in connection with the pollination and the ensuing allergy risk.

Material and method:

The RNSA (French Aerobiology Network) has pollen background-traps located in more than 60 towns throughout France. These traps are volumetric Hirst models making it possible to obtain impacted strips for microscopic analysis by trained operators. The main taxa studied here are birch, grasses and ragweed for a long period of more than 25 years over some cities of France.

Results:

Concerning birch but also other catkins or buds’ trees pollinating in late winter or spring, it can be seen an overall advance of the pollen season start date until 2004 and then a progressive delay, the current date being nearly the same as it was 20 years ago, and an increasing trend in the quantities of pollen emitted.

For grasses and ragweed, we only found a few minor changes in the start date but a longer duration of the pollen season.

Discussion:

As regards the trees, the start date of the new production of catkins or buds is never the 1st of January but depends on the species. For example, it is early July for birch. For breaking dormancy, flowering, and pollinating, the trees and other perennial species need a period of accumulation of cold degrees (Chilling) and later an accumulation of warm degrees (Forcing). With climate change these periods may be shorter or longer depending of the autumn and winter temperature. Therefore, a change in the annual temperature may have a direct effect on the vegetal physiology and hence on pollen release. It may also explain why the quantities of pollen produced are increasing.

The Poaceae reserve, from one place to another and without any spatial structuring, very contrasted patterns which make it impossible to identify a general tendency. This is probably due to the great diversity of taxa grouped under the generic term Poaceae, which are clearly not equally sensitive to climate change.

Conclusion:

Trees with allergenic pollen blowing late winter or early spring pollinate since 2004 later and produce amounts of pollen constantly increasing. Grasses and ragweed have longer periods of pollination with either slightly higher or most often lower pollen production.

How to cite: Monnier, S., Thibaudon, M., Besancenot, J.-P., Sindt, C., and Oliver, G.: Phenological phases of pollination related to climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15034, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15034, 2021.

EGU21-3087 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Comparing in situ phenology and remotely derived phenometrics across ecosystems

Alison Donnelly, Rong Yu, Katherine Jones, Michael Belitz, Bonan Li, Katharyn Duffy, Xiaoyang Zhang, Jianmin Wang, Bijan Seyednasrollah, Kathy Gerst, Daijiang Li, Youssef Kaddoura, Kai Zhu, Jeffrey Morisette, Colette Ramey, and Kathleen Smith

The use of satellite sensors, near-surface cameras and other remote methods of monitoring vegetation phenology at landscape and higher scales has become increasingly common. These technologies provide a means to determine the timing of phenophases and growing season length at different spatial resolutions; coverage that is not attainable by human observers. However, in situ ground observations are necessary to validate remotely derived phenometrics. Despite increased knowledge and expertise there still remains the persistent challenge of reconciling ground observations at the individual plant level with remotely sensed (RS) phenometrics at landscape or larger scales. Here, we compared the timing of in situ phenophase estimates (spring and autumn) with a range of corresponding remote sensing (MODIS, VIIRS, PhenoCam) phenometrics across five terrestrial sites in the USA’s National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON). The sites represent a range of ecosystem types including, deciduous forest (Harvard Forest, MA), dry scrubland (Onaqui, UT), evergreen forest (Abby Road, WA) and seasonal wetlands (Disney Wilderness Preserve and Ordway-Swisher Biological Station, FL) focusing on a three year period from 2017-2019. Our main objective was compare a range of co-located RS pheometrics with in situ observations to explore potential reasons for the observed discrepancies and to determine which technologies were more aligned with ground observations. Statistically significant relationships were strongest (p<0.001) for spring phenophases compared to autumn. In general, satellite derived phenometrics tended to be earlier (RMSE 21.7 – 28.4 days) than in situ spring phenology whereas PhenoCam derived phenometrics were later (RMSE 24 days). Overall, discrepancies between in situ and RS phenometrics related to scale, species availability and the short duration of the time-series (3 years). However, as the NEON project progresses these challenges are expected to be reduced as more data become available.

How to cite: Donnelly, A., Yu, R., Jones, K., Belitz, M., Li, B., Duffy, K., Zhang, X., Wang, J., Seyednasrollah, B., Gerst, K., Li, D., Kaddoura, Y., Zhu, K., Morisette, J., Ramey, C., and Smith, K.: Comparing in situ phenology and remotely derived phenometrics across ecosystems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3087, 2021.

EGU21-8038 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Monitoring deciduous tree phenology estimates with Sentinel-2, phenocam and field measurements in Ireland

Gourav Misra, Fiona Cawkwell, and Astrid Wingler

Phenology is an important driver of ecosystem performance. However, studies of phenology in Ireland have been limited by the availability of data at high spatial and temporal resolutions. The new suite of Sentinel-2 sensors, with their enhanced spatial and temporal resolutions might help overcome some of these challenges. Additionally, the presence of red edge bands in the Sentinel-2 sensors provides a unique opportunity to evaluate the performance of different vegetation indices in tracking near surface (phenocam) and ground/laboratory measures of phenology. In this study, we present our initial analyses for the year 2020. Nine common lime trees (Tilia x europaea) on the University College Cork campus (Cork, Ireland) and three undisturbed broadleaf woodland sites from the National Park and Wildlife Services (NPWS) survey were selected. The phenology of these sites was analyzed from satellite derived vegetation indices of NDVI, EVI, GNDVI and NDRE. The available 24 cloud free Sentinel-2 images were pre-processed and interpolated to daily time steps. The start of season (SOS), position of peak (POP) and end of season (EOS) were then extracted from the daily time series using the half amplitude and maximum value method. Similarly, daily data from a phenocam overlooking three of the lime trees were processed to extract the phenological dates. Weekly measurements of leaf chlorophyll or chlorophyll content index (CCI) and maximum photosystem II efficiency (Fv/Fm) by sampling five leaves from each lime tree were made during June to November of 2020. Preliminary results indicate that different vegetation indices vary in their correlation to ground and phenocam observations. The dates of SOS, POP and EOS obtained from Sentinel-2 do not exactly match the ground and phenocam observations, nor are the different indices coincident with each other, with maximum deviations of up to a month and a week for EOS and SOS respectively. The phenological metrics estimated from the EVI time series were in general earlier (i.e. 116, 162 and 270 day of year for SOS, POP and EOS respectively) and those from the NDRE were the last (i.e. 131, 211 and 288 day of year for SOS, POP and EOS respectively). Although local differences were observed in the field, the Sentinel-2 time series data were shown to perform well in tracking the autumn phenology, and in most cases the observed mismatches in phenological data could be ascribed to differences in the scale of observations i.e. pixel vs point comparisons and on spectral basis i.e. sensor vs instrument for measuring CCI. A steeper drop in CCI and Fv/Fm values was also observed in the late autumn period. Such differences in the progression of each time series curve can possibly lead to mismatches in the phenology estimated from vegetation indices and from observations. Other mismatches could also emanate from the fact that field sampling of leaves was done from below the canopy whereas the satellite view of canopy is from the top. Experience from the field revealed differences in the rates of greening and yellowing of the leaves in different regions of the tree canopy.

How to cite: Misra, G., Cawkwell, F., and Wingler, A.: Monitoring deciduous tree phenology estimates with Sentinel-2, phenocam and field measurements in Ireland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8038, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8038, 2021.

EGU21-8330 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Vegetation indices as a proxy for spatio-temporal variations in water availability in the semi-arid Rio Santa valley (Callejón de Huaylas, Peru)

Lorenz Hänchen, Cornelia Klein, Fabien Maussion, Wolfgang Gurgiser, and Georg Wohlfahrt

In the semi-arid Peruvian Andes, the agricultural growing season is mostly determined by the timing of the onset and cessation of the wet season, to which annual crop yields are highly sensitive. Recently, local farmers in the Rio Santa valley (Callejón de Huaylas) bordered by the glaciated Coordillera Blanca to the east and the unglaciated Coordillera Negra to the west, reported increasing challenges in the predictability of the onset, more frequent dry spells and extreme precipitation events during the wet season. Previous studies based on time-series of local rain gauges however did not show any significant changes in either timing or intensity of the wet season. Both in-situ and satellite rainfall data for the region lack the necessary spatial resolution to capture the highly variable rainfall distribution typical for complex terrain, and are often of questionable quality and temporal consistency. As in other Andean valleys, there remains considerable uncertainty in the Rio Santa basin regarding hydrological changes over the last decades. These changes are of a great concern for the local society and the lacking knowledge about changes in water availability (i.e. rainfall) and water demand (i.e. land use practices) hinder the assessment of relevant factors for the development of adaption strategies.

The over-archiving goal of this study was to better understand variability and recent changes of plant growth and rainfall seasonality and the interactions between them in the Rio Santa basin. Specifically, we aimed to illustrate how satellite-derived information on vegetation greenness can be exploited to infer a robust and highly resolved picture of recent changes in rainfall and vegetation across the region: As the semi-arid climate causes water availability (i.e. precipitation) to be the key limiting factor for plant growth, patterns of precipitation occurrence and the seasonality of vegetation indices (VIs) are tightly coupled. Therefore, these indices can serve as an integrated proxy of rainfall. By combining a 20 year time series of MODIS Aqua and Terra VIs (from 2000 to today) and datasets of precipitation (both remote-sensing and observations) we explore recent spatial and temporal changes in vegetation and water availability by combining VIs timeseries and derived land surface phenology (LSP) with measures of wet season onset and cessation from rainfall data. Furthermore, we analyse the interaction of El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the wet and growing season.

We find spatially variable but significant greening over the majority of the Rio Santa valley domain. This greening is particularly pronounced during the the dry season (Austral winter) and indicates an overall increase of plant available water over time. The start of the growing season (SOS) is temporally highly variable and dominates the variability of growing season length over time. Peak and end of season (POS, EOS) are significantly delayed in the 20 year analysis. By partitioning the results into periods of three stages of ENSO (neutral, Niño, Niña) we find an earlier onset of the rainy and growing season and an overall increased season length in years associated with El Niño.

How to cite: Hänchen, L., Klein, C., Maussion, F., Gurgiser, W., and Wohlfahrt, G.: Vegetation indices as a proxy for spatio-temporal variations in water availability in the semi-arid Rio Santa valley (Callejón de Huaylas, Peru), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8330, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8330, 2021.

EGU21-10584 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Global remotely sensed phenology of Blue-Green Ecosystems

Jelle Lever, Yann Vitasse, Luis J. Gilarranz, Petra D'Odorico, and Daniel Odermatt

Changing environmental conditions have significantly altered the phenology, spatial distribution, and abundances of species in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems. Recent work has shown that such changes may alter the strengths of interactions between species and may jumble structural patterns in networks of trophic, mutualistic and/or other interactions that are crucial for biodiversity. ‘Blue’ (aquatic) and ‘green’ (terrestrial) ecosystems are closely interlinked through biogeochemical cycles and species that inhabit both ecosystems. When the effects of abiotic drivers of global environmental change, such as a change in temperature, precipitation, or land use, are different for lakes and their surrounding watersheds, a blue-green phenological mismatch may therefore occur. In particular, because such changes in seasonal patterns may cascade down food webs.
Remote sensing provides spatially and temporally dense information on biochemical properties of the Earth surface, including biomass and primary production indicators for both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Deriving phenology metrics for these indicators is routine practice for terrestrial vegetation, and several case studies demonstrate the feasibility of analogous metrics for lakes and inland seas. In this study, we used remote sensing data to extract phenology metrics (e.g. start of the growing season) for 4264 lakes distributed across a wide range of biomes from daily chlorophyll estimates and vegetation indices spanning a time-period of 15-20 years. We investigate whether changes in the phenology of lake phytoplankton and the surrounding terrestrial vegetation have occurred during this period, and how the phenology in either ecosystem type is synchronized.
Analysis are underway, but preliminary results suggest contrasting results across different biomes as well as substantial differences in the way in which the phenology of primary producers in lakes and on their surrounding watersheds has changed within these biomes.

How to cite: Lever, J., Vitasse, Y., Gilarranz, L. J., D'Odorico, P., and Odermatt, D.: Global remotely sensed phenology of Blue-Green Ecosystems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10584, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10584, 2021.

EGU21-12359 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Mapping vegetation variables in Google Earth Engine using Gaussian Process Regression models.   

Matías Salinero Delgado, Luca Pipia, Eatidal Amin, Santiago Belda, and Jochem Verrelst

The aim of ESA's forthcoming FLuorescence EXplorer (FLEX) is to achieve a global monitoring of the vegetation's chlorophyll fluorescence by means of an imaging spectrometer, FLORIS. For the retrieval of the fluorescence signal measured from space, other vegetation variables need to be retrieved simultaneously, such as (1) Leaf Area Index (LAI), (2) Leaf Chlorophyll content (Cab), and (3) Fractional Vegetation cover (FCover), among others. The undergoing SENTIFLEX ERC project has already demonstrated the feasibility to operationally infer these variables by hybrid retrieval approaches, which combine the generalization capabilities offered by radiative transfer models (RTMs) and computational efficiency of machine learning methods. Reflectance spectra corresponding to a large variety of canopy realizations served as input to train a Gaussian Process Regression (GPR) algorithm for each targeted variable. Following this approach, sets of GPR retrieval models have been trained for Sentinel-2 and -3 reflectance images.

In that direction, we started to explore the potential of Google Earth Engine (GEE) to facilitate regional to global mapping.  GEE is a platform with multi-petabyte satellite imagery catalog and geospatial datasets with planetary-scale analysis capabilities, which is freely available for scientific purposes. Among the different EO archives, it is possible to access the whole collection of Sentinel-2 ground reflectance data. In this work, we present the results of an efficient implementation of the GPR-based vegetation models developed for Sentinel-2 in the framework of SENSAGRI H2020 project in GEE. By taking advantage of GEE cloud-computing power, we are able to avoid the typical bottleneck of downloading and process large amounts of data locally and generate results of GPR-based retrieval models developed for Sentinel-2 in a fast and efficient way, covering large areas in matter of seconds. As a first step in that direction we present here an open web-based GEE application able to generate LAI Green and LAI Brown maps from Sentinel-2- imagery at 20m in a tile-wise manner all over the world, and time series of selected pixels during user-defined time interval.

To illustrate this functionalities and have better understanding of the phenology, we targeted a region in Castilla y León (Spain) from where we will present results for 2018 classified per crop type. This land cover classification was generated by the ITACYL (Instituto Tecnológico Agrario de Castilla y León) during SENSAGRI.

Future development will tackle the possibility to extend our analysis capability to additional variables, such as FCover and Cab, maintaining the computational efficiency as the main driver to ensure that the GEE application continues to be an agile and easy tool for spatiotemporal Earth observation studies.

How to cite: Salinero Delgado, M., Pipia, L., Amin, E., Belda, S., and Verrelst, J.: Mapping vegetation variables in Google Earth Engine using Gaussian Process Regression models.   , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12359, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12359, 2021.

EGU21-12437 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Crop phenology monitoring from Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 green LAI time series at the Nile Delta

Eatidal Amin, Santiago Belda, Luca Pipia, Zoltan Szantoi, Ahmed El Baroudy, Jose Moreno, and Jochem Verrelst

Monitoring of crop phenology significantly assists agricultural managing practices and plays an important role in crop yield predictions. Multi-temporal satellite-based observations allow analyzing vegetation seasonal dynamics over large areas by using vegetation indices or deriving biophysical variables. The Northern Nile Delta represents about half of all agricultural lands of Egypt. In this region, intensifying farming systems are predominant, which translates into a pressure on water supply demand. Moreover, double cropping rotations schemes are increasing, requiring a high temporal and spatial resolution monitoring for capturing successive crop growth cycles. This study presents a framework for crop phenological characterization based on high spatial and temporal resolution time series of green Leaf Area Index (LAI). Particularly, NASA's Harmonized Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 (HLS) surface reflectance dataset was used. The HLS dataset provides seamless products from both satellites, enabling global land observations every 2-3 days at 30m. A green LAI retrieval model was originally trained using ground-based LAI measurements with Gaussian processes technique and validated for Sentinel-2 (R2: 0.7, RMSE= 0.67m2/m2) (Amin et al., 2020). Given the compatible spectral bands configuration of both sensors, a new model for Landsat 8 was adapted from the original one. Both models were implemented in an HLS image based automated retrieval chain obtaining therefore two different LAI time series, which were spatially averaged per crop parcel according to the ground data at disposal. The subsequent analysis was performed based on the time series phenological pre-processing and modelling implemented in the in-house developed scientific time series toolbox DATimeS (Belda et al., 2020). The proposed framework permitted to determine the crop patterns for four consecutive years (2016-2019), identifying one or two seasons per year, for single (e.g. grape, citrus) or double-cropping (e.g. maize-onion, maize-wheat, rice-clover), respectively. Alongside, each detected crop was characterized by retrieving a selected set of phenological parameters, which were contrasted with respect to the established crop type calendar (planting and harvesting dates) and for each crop type, the annual mean value was computed and the intra annual variability within the four years was assessed. 

 

Amin, E., Verrelst, J., Rivera-Caicedo, J. P., Pipia, L., Ruiz-Verdú, A., & Moreno, J. (2020). Prototyping Sentinel-2 green LAI and brown LAI products for cropland monitoring. Remote Sensing of Environment, 112168.

Belda, S., Pipia, L., Morcillo-Pallarés, P., Rivera-Caicedo, J. P., Amin, E., De Grave, C., & Verrelst, J. (2020). DATimeS: A machine learning time series GUI toolbox for gap-filling and vegetation phenology trends detection. Environmental Modelling & Software, 104666.

How to cite: Amin, E., Belda, S., Pipia, L., Szantoi, Z., El Baroudy, A., Moreno, J., and Verrelst, J.: Crop phenology monitoring from Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2 green LAI time series at the Nile Delta, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12437, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12437, 2021.

EGU21-12576 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Near-Ground-Based Optical Plant Phenology Measurements at China Ecological Meteorology Sites

Dasheng Yang, Shilin Cui, Benzhi Zhang, Dongli Wu, Yong Lei, Chao Shen, Jingqun Zhu, Yingshun Wang, and Wenyan Wang

Abstract Climate change is a hot issue in the global scale. The some varieties of phenological phase of plants (trees, grasslands and crops et al.) can directly and objectively reflected climate change and Commonly, the response of plant phenology to climate change is sensitive, especially to climatic factors such as precipitation, temperature, soil characteristics in the growing environment, and sometimes can be considered as an indicator of climate change. Those meteorology and soil factors must be taken into account when we build phenological model so as to quantitatively study the relationship between climate change and plant phenology. Beside of those factors, the high frequency and multi-scale acquisition of phenological observation data is also the basis for phenological model researches. Since February of 2020, China Meteorological Administration (CMA) has established 25 vegetation ecological observation sites in Inner Mongolia autonomous region, Shaanxi, Hebei, Sichuan, Guangxi, Fujian and Anhui provinces. The automatic vegetation eco-meteorological observation instruments, whichi are composed of image sensor (digital camera), multispectral sensor, laser altimeter, point cloud laser radar and sound sensor, have been installed in the sites. They can provide so much products as image of plant community, normal difference vegetation index (NDVI), plant height, canopy height and animal sound at present. Of all these products, image data of plant community can be further retrieved to generate the greenness chromatic coordinate (Gcc) data, which can be widely applied into the phenological studies and the validations of satellite terrestrial vegetation products. After months of experimental operation, these equipments show the great ability to monitor the growth and development of terrestrial plants in China. This ability also lays a foundation for the establishment of the plant ecological observation network in China (China Vegetation Ecological Meteorological Observation Network).

KEYWORDS:Plant phenology, near-surface-based measurement, observation network

How to cite: Yang, D., Cui, S., Zhang, B., Wu, D., Lei, Y., Shen, C., Zhu, J., Wang, Y., and Wang, W.: Near-Ground-Based Optical Plant Phenology Measurements at China Ecological Meteorology Sites, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12576, 2021.

EGU21-14322 | vPICO presentations | CL2.8

Gaussian Process Regression hyperparameter optimization for image time series gap-filling of Earth observation data and crop monitoring

Santiago Belda, Matías Salinero, Eatidal Amin, Luca Pipia, Pablo Morcillo-Pallarés, and Jochem Verrelst

In general, modeling phenological evolution represents a challenging task mainly because of time series gaps and noisy data, coming from different viewing and illumination geometries, cloud cover, seasonal snow and the interval needed to revisit and acquire data for the exact same location. For that reason, the use of reliable gap-filling fitting functions and smoothing filters is frequently required for retrievals at the highest feasible accuracy. Of specific interest to filling gaps in time series is the emergence of machine learning regression algorithms (MLRAs) which can serve as fitting functions. Among the multiple MLRA approaches currently available, the kernel-based methods developed in a Bayesian framework deserve special attention because of both being adaptive and providing associated uncertainty estimates, such as Gaussian Process Regression (GPR).

Recent studies demonstrated the effectiveness of GPR for gap-filling of biophysical parameter time series because the hyperparameters can be optimally set for each time series (one for each pixel in the area) with a single optimization procedure. The entire procedure of learning a GPR model only relies on appropriate selection of the type of kernel and the hyperparameters involved in the estimation of input data covariance. Despite its clear strategic advantage, the most important shortcomings of this technique are the (1) high computational cost and (2) memory requirements of their training, which grows cubically and quadratically with the number of model’s samples, respectively. This can become problematic in view of processing a large amount of data, such as in Sentinel-2 (S2) time series tiles. Hence, optimization strategies need to be developed on how to speed up the GPR processing while maintaining the superior performance in terms of accuracy.

To mitigate its computational burden and to address such shortcoming and repetitive procedure, we evaluated whether the GPR hyperparameters can be preoptimized over a reduced set of representative pixels and kept fixed over a more extended crop area. We used S2 LAI time series over an agricultural region in Castile and Leon (North-West Spain) and testing different functions for Covariance estimation such as exponential Kernel, Squared exponential kernel and matern kernel with parameter 3/2 or 5/2. The performance of image reconstructions was compared against the standard per-pixel GPR time series training process. Results showed that accuracies were on the same order (12% RMSE degradation) whereas processing time accelerated up to 90 times. Crop phenology indicators were also calculated and compared, revealing similar temporal patterns with differences in start and end of growing season of no more than five days. To the benefit of crop monitoring applications, all the gap-filling and phenology indicators retrieval techniques have been implemented into the freely downloadable GUI toolbox DATimeS (Decomposition and Analysis of Time Series Software - https://artmotoolbox.com/).

How to cite: Belda, S., Salinero, M., Amin, E., Pipia, L., Morcillo-Pallarés, P., and Verrelst, J.: Gaussian Process Regression hyperparameter optimization for image time series gap-filling of Earth observation data and crop monitoring, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14322, 2021.

CL2.12 – Climate change and other drivers of environmental change: Developments, interlinkages and impacts in regional seas and coastal regions

EGU21-2649 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Absolute Baltic Sea Level Trends in the Satellite Altimetry Era: A  Revisit

Julius Oelsmann and the Baltic+ SEAL

For sea level studies, coastal adaptation, and planning for future sea level scenarios, regional responses require regionally-tailored sea level information. Global sea level products from satellite altimeter missions are now available through the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Climate Change Initiative Sea Level Project (SL_cci). However, these global datasets are not entirely appropriate for supporting regional actions. Particularly for the Baltic Sea region, complications such as coastal complexity and sea-ice restrain our ability to exploit radar altimetry data.

This presentation highlights the benefits and opportunities offered by such regionalised advances, through an examination by the ESA-funded Baltic SEAL project (http://balticseal.eu/). We present the challenges faced, and solutions implemented, to develop new dedicated along-track and gridded sea level datasets for Baltic Sea stakeholders, spanning the years 1995-2019. Advances in waveform classification and altimetry echo-fitting, expansion of echo-fitting to a wide range of altimetry missions (including Delay-Doppler altimeters), and Baltic-focused multi-mission cross calibration, enable all altimetry missions’ data to be integrated into a final gridded product.

This gridded product, and a range of altimetry datasets, offer new insights into the Baltic Sea’s mean sea level and its variability during 1995-2019. Here, we focus on the analysis of sea level trends in the region using both tide gauge and altimetry data. The Baltic SEAL absolute sea level trend at the coast better aligns with information from the in-situ stations, when compared to current global products. The rise in sea level is statistically significant in the region of study and higher in winter than in summer. A gradient of over 3 mm/yr in sea level rise is observed, with sea levels in the north and east of the basin rising more than in the south-west. Part of this gradient (about 1 mm/yr) is directly explained by a regression analysis of the wind contribution on the sea level time series. A sub-basin analysis comparing the northernmost part (Bay of Bothnia) with the south-west reveals that the differences in winter sea level anomalies are related to different phases of the North-Atlantic Oscillation (0.71 correlation coefficient). Sea level anomalies are higher in the Bay of Bothnia when winter wind forcing pushes waters through Ekman transport from the south-west towards east and north.

The study also demonstrates the maturity of enhanced satellite altimetry products to support local sea level studies in areas characterised by complex coastlines or sea-ice coverage. The processing chain used in this study can be exported to other regions, in particular to test the applicability in regions affected by larger ocean tides. We promote further exploitation and identification of further synergies with other efforts focused on relevant oceanic variables for societal applications.

How to cite: Oelsmann, J. and the Baltic+ SEAL: Absolute Baltic Sea Level Trends in the Satellite Altimetry Era: A  Revisit, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2649, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2649, 2021.

EGU21-8631 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Representative climate projections for the North Sea and Baltic Sea

Christian Dieterich, Matthias Gröger, Anders Höglund, Renate A. I. Wilcke, and H. E. Markus Meier

Robust estimations of uncertainty for climate projections on the regional scale are highly needed but are still challenging. Regional climate projections rely on downscaling global climate scenarios. Typically, a number of different global climate models are downscaled to assess the inherent model uncertainty. The more models, the more robust the estimate of model uncertainty. However, this strategy is time consuming and so ensembles of regional projections are usually smaller than ensembles of global projections which can lead to an underestimation of regional uncertainty. With an increasing number of available global projections regional downscaling becomes increasingly expensive. We use a regional ensemble of coupled atmosphere-ice-ocean scenarios and a ensemble of ocean-ecosystem scenarios for the Baltic Sea to explore the effect of model selection on the representation of model uncertainty. Using a number of climate indices to characterize the regional system we apply a model selection that is representative of the original ensemble in terms of ensemble spread. We use existing algorithms to generate orthogonal patterns of climate change for the Baltic Sea. A small number of patterns is used to represent the climate change and its uncertainty in physical and biogeochemical parameters of the Baltic Sea. We show that climate change signals in atmosphere, ocean and ecosystem are coherent and that atmospheric or oceanic indices can be used to select global climate models for an ensemble of representative regional ecosystem scenarios for the Baltic Sea. Since the atmospheric climate in the regional climate model is close to its representation in the global climate model that latter can be used to perform an initial model selection.

How to cite: Dieterich, C., Gröger, M., Höglund, A., Wilcke, R. A. I., and Meier, H. E. M.: Representative climate projections for the North Sea and Baltic Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8631, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8631, 2021.

EGU21-11989 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Projected climate change in the South Asia and northern Indian Ocean by the end of the 21st century as obtained from a Regional Earth System Model

Anton Yu. Dvornikov, Dmitry V. Sein, Stanislav D. Martyanov, Vladimir A. Ryabchenko, and Pankaj Kumar

Detailed atmospheric, ocean physical and biogeochemical characteristics for the period 2015-2100 within the South Asia CORDEX domain have been obtained from simulations of the Regional Earth System Model ROM.

Comparative analysis of average climatic characteristics for the past (1975-2004) and future (2070-2099) climates has been carried out. It shows significant future SST increase, reaching 3ºC on average, over the considered area. The salinity of the ocean's upper layer will decrease by 1 ‰ on average, which indicates a change in the precipitation-evaporation balance in the future climate. The simulated annual MLD will decrease by 5 m in the future. However, this MLD change will be strongly irregular, both in time and space. Simulations also show a widespread decrease of the chlorophyll-a concentration in the surface layer (up to 2 mg Chl m-3) in the future, especially pronounced in the northern and western parts of the Arabian Sea. It is a significant change, given that absolute chlorophyll-a concentration in these areas is typically 3-4 mg Chl m-3 in spring and 5-8 mg Chl m-3 in summer, as obtained for the 1975-2004 model run. The model also shows that the chlorophyll-a concentration at the surface will decrease by 1–2 mg Chl m-3 along the western coast of the Bay of Bengal in the future. The relative decrease in the surface chlorophyll-a concentration will be about 40% in the future climate in the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal.

The model solution according to the SSP5-8.5 scenario shows a decrease in the amount of precipitation in the future climate (up to 3-4 mm/day) over the northeastern part of India and over Nepal in summer. But over the central part of India, in the Andaman Sea, over Thailand and Myanmar, there will be an increase in the amount of precipitation. The total continental runoff into the Bay of Bengal will increase, but the runoff in the Ganges delta will be greatly weakened. Thus, despite the decrease in the runoff of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers, the total continental runoff into the Bay of Bengal turns out to be higher in the future climate (2070-2099) relative to retrospective calculations (1975-2004) due to the runoff of smaller rivers.

 

Acknowledgements: This work is funded by Russian Science Foundation (RSF, Project 19-47-02015) and Department of Science and Technology (DST, Govt. of India, grant DST/INT/RUS/RSF/P-33/G). The research was performed in the framework of the state assignment of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russia (theme No. 0128-2021-0014). This work used resources of the Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum (DKRZ) granted by its Scientific Steering Committee (WLA) under project ID ba1144.

How to cite: Dvornikov, A. Yu., Sein, D. V., Martyanov, S. D., Ryabchenko, V. A., and Kumar, P.: Projected climate change in the South Asia and northern Indian Ocean by the end of the 21st century as obtained from a Regional Earth System Model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11989, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11989, 2021.

EGU21-11908 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Extreme events on Gulf of Bothnia

Simo-Matti Siiriä, Sam Fredriksson, Petra Roiha, Pekka Alenius, and Annu Oikkonen

The future changes in the physical conditions in the Gulf of Bothnia can have considerable impact on various human activities in the area. In this presentation we concentrate on marine heatwaves and ice conditions. The general changing trends of ice conditions, temperature and salinity give an idea of the changes to come. It is, however, also important to know the possible changes in extremes, and their frequencies in the future. To name a few examples, aquaculture activities can be affected by sudden exceptional warm or cold periods of water, and wind-energy construction benefits from knowing what kind of ice conditions can be expected.

In the SmartSea project we have made simulations of future scenarios for predicting the possible changes in the conditions in the Gulf of Bothnia. We have simulated a historical control period of 1976-2006 with three different downscaled global circulation models, and use these as comparisons for runs made with same model forcings for the years 2006-2060 with RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5 scenarios. These scenarios are used to detect the type and frequency of extreme events, such as marine heatwaves or extreme ice conditions in the control period, and the change of these in the future for both RCP’s.

How to cite: Siiriä, S.-M., Fredriksson, S., Roiha, P., Alenius, P., and Oikkonen, A.: Extreme events on Gulf of Bothnia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11908, 2021.

EGU21-9808 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Wave climate change in the Gulf of Bothnia

Jan-Victor Björkqvist, Jani Särkkä, Hedi Kanarik, and Laura Tuomi

Wave climate change in the Gulf of Bothnia in 2030–2059 was investigated using regional wave climate projections. For the simulations we used wave model WAM. As the atmospheric forcing for the wave model we had three global climate scenarios (HADGEM2-ES, MPI-ESM, EC-EARTH) downscaled with RCA4-NEMO regional model. The ice concentration for the wave model was obtained from NEMO ocean model simulations using the same atmospheric forcing. We used both RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 greenhouse gas scenarios. The spatial resolution of the simulation data was 1.8 km, enabling detailed analyses of the wave properties near the coast. From the simulation data we calculated statistics and return levels of significant wave heights using extreme value analysis, and assessed the projected changes in the wave climate in the Gulf of Bothnia. The projected increase in the significant wave heights is mainly due to the decreasing ice cover, especially in the Bothnian Bay. Projected changes in the most prevalent wind direction impacts the spatial pattern of the wave heights in the Bothnian Sea.

How to cite: Björkqvist, J.-V., Särkkä, J., Kanarik, H., and Tuomi, L.: Wave climate change in the Gulf of Bothnia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9808, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9808, 2021.

EGU21-7648 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

21st century nutrient and oxygen dynamics in the Gulf of Bothnia

Itzel Ruvalcaba Baroni, Jenny Hieronymus, Sam Fredriksson, and Lars Arneborg

The Gulf of Bothnia is the only sub-basin of the Baltic Sea with no serious eutrophication. However, long-term observations have shown degradation of the water quality over the past years, indicating warning signals for the future. Here, we use a high resolution ocean circulation model including biogeochemistry to study 21st century nutrient and oxygen changes in the Gulf of Bothnia. We analyze ensembles for 5 different scenarios; a historical (1975-2005) and 4 future projections (2006-2100). For the projections, two atmospheric pCO2 trajectories are used, RCP4.5 and RCP8.5, and two settings for nutrient loads are applied to each RCP scenario: one following the Baltic Sea Action Plan (BSAP) and the other assuming business as usual. We also test a historical scenario but with no local nutrient loads to better understand the biogeochemical influence of the lateral open boundary. The comparison of observations with the historical scenario shows that oxygen trends are well captured by the model despite a small bias in nutrient concentrations. Our results suggest that the Bothnian Bay is more sensitive to river loads than the Bothnian Sea, which is primarily affected by the inflows from the Baltic proper. All future projections show a decrease in phosphate concentrations and an increase in nitrate concentrations due to lower/higher input of phosphate/nitrate from the Baltic proper. Oxygen concentrations in bottom waters of the Gulf of Bothnia are not susceptible to become hypoxic in the future. However, when business as usual is applied for nutrient loads, oxygen concentrations decrease significantly over the entire future period and short episodes of low oxygen conditions in bottom waters (with less than 5 ml O2/l) become more frequent and more pronounced in the Bothnian Sea, especially towards the end of the century.

 

How to cite: Ruvalcaba Baroni, I., Hieronymus, J., Fredriksson, S., and Arneborg, L.: 21st century nutrient and oxygen dynamics in the Gulf of Bothnia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7648, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7648, 2021.

EGU21-8166 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Modelling nitrogen transport across compartments over northern Europe

Stefan Hagemann, Ute Daewel, Volker Matthias, and Tobias Stacke

River discharge and the associated nutrient loads are important factors that influence the functioning of the marine ecosystem. Lateral inflows from land carrying fresh, nutrient-rich water determine coastal physical conditions and nutrient concentration and, hence, dominantly influence primary production in the system. Since this forms the basis of the trophic food web, riverine nutrient concentrations impact the variability of the whole coastal ecosystem. This process becomes even more relevant in systems like the Baltic Sea, which is almost decoupled from the open ocean and land-borne nutrients play a major role for ecosystem productivity on seasonal up to decadal time scales.

 

In order to represent the effects of climate or land use change on nutrient availability, a coupled system approach is required to simulate the transport of nutrients across Earth system compartments. This comprises their transport within the atmosphere, the deposition and human application at the surface, the lateral transport over the land surface into the ocean and their dynamics and transformation in the marine ecosystem. In our study, we combine these processes in a modelling chain within the GCOAST (Geesthacht Coupled cOAstal model SysTem) framework for the northern European region. This modelling chain comprises:

 

  • Simulation of emissions, atmospheric transport and deposition with the chemistry transport model CMAQ at 36 km grid resolution using atmospheric forcing from the coastDat3 data that have been generated with the regional climate model COSMO-CLM over Europe at 0.11° resolution using ERA-Interim re-analyses as boundary conditions
  • Simulation of inert processes at the land surface with the global hydrology model HydroPy (former MPI-HM), i.e. considering total nitrogen without any chemical reactions
  • Riverine transport with the Hydrological Discharge (HD) model at 0.0833° spatial resolution
  • Simulation of the North Sea and Baltic Sea ecosystems with 3D coupled physical-biogeochemical NPZD-model ECOSMO II at about 10 km resolution

 

We will present first results and their validation from this exercise.

 

How to cite: Hagemann, S., Daewel, U., Matthias, V., and Stacke, T.: Modelling nitrogen transport across compartments over northern Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8166, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8166, 2021.

EGU21-3868 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Modelling dissolved organic nutrients in the Gulf of Finland: eliminating an uncertainty in boundary conditions

Alexey Isaev, Oksana Vladimirova, Tatjana Eremina, Vladimir Ryabchenko, and Oleg Savchuk

The St. Petersburg model of eutrophication (SPBEM) has been modified with an explicit description of the total amounts of organic nutrients, including both dissolved and particulate forms [1, 2]. This modification allows total nutrient amounts to be fully taken into account as reported in field measurements and presented in environmental documents, thereby eliminating one of the important sources of uncertainty in boundary conditions [3].

The SPBEM-2 model was validated and verified in the Gulf of Finland using data from more than 4,000 oceanographic stations for the period from 2009 to 2014. This results showed that the presented version of SPBEM-2 is able to plausibly reproduce all the main large-scale features and phenomena of the dynamics of nutrients in the Gulf of Finland, especially in its productive layer, which, for hypsographic reasons, contains and transforms the main reserves of nutrients.

Expansion of SPBEM-2 with dissolved organic nutrients makes it possible to fully take into account the loads on the land in both historical and scenario modelling, thereby reducing the uncertainty of impact.

Acknowledgements: The authors A.I. and V.R. conducted the present study within the framework of the state assignment (theme No. 0128-2021-0014).The authors O.V. and T.E. were supported by the Government Target Project N FSZU-2020-0009 of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation. The author O.S. from the Baltic Nest Institute was supported by the Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management through their grant 1:11—Measures for the marine and water environment.

References

1. Vladimirova O. M., Eremina T. R., Isaev A. V., Ryabchenko V. A., Savchuk O. P. Modelling dissolved organic nutrients in the Gulf of Finland. Fundamentalnaya i Prikladnaya Gidrofizika. 2018, 11, 4, 90—101. doi: 10.7868/S2073667318040111.

2. Isaev A, Vladimirova O, Eremina T, Ryabchenko V, Savchuk O. Accounting for Dissolved Organic Nutrients in an SPBEM-2 Model: Validation and Verification. Water. 2020; 12(5):1307.

3. Meier H.E.M., Edman M., Eilola K., et al. Assessment of Uncertainties in Scenario Simulations of Biogeochemical Cycles in the Baltic Sea. Front. Mar. Sci., 04 March 2019, Vol.6, Article 46. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2019.00046

 

How to cite: Isaev, A., Vladimirova, O., Eremina, T., Ryabchenko, V., and Savchuk, O.: Modelling dissolved organic nutrients in the Gulf of Finland: eliminating an uncertainty in boundary conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3868, 2021.

EGU21-7533 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Bioavailability and remineralization of sediment-derived dissolved organic carbon from the Baltic Sea depositional area

Monika Lengier, Beata Szymczycha, and Karol Kuliński

Sediment pore waters in the depositional areas of the Baltic Sea are enriched with the dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which results in a diffusive flux of DOC to the water column. It was found that up to 30% of OM deposited in the sediments returns to the water column and may alter processes occurring there e.g. increase the oxygen demand in the bottom waters. Still little is known about the bioavailability of sediment-derived DOC and its remineralization dynamics. Thus, the aim of this study was to assess the bioavailability, degradation rate constant and half-life time of sediment-derived DOC.

Bottom water and pore water, collected during r/v Oceania cruise in March 2018 in the Gdańsk Deep, have been mixed in a volume ratio of 4:1. To ensure oxic conditions in the experiment, the mixture was bubbled with the ambient air to reach 100% O2 saturation. Incubation of such prepared samples was conducted in 23±0.1°C for 126 days. At the beginning (t=0) and after 1, 2, 6, 18, 35, 73 and 126 days of the incubation the individual samples were analyzed for total dissolved organic carbon DOC. In parallel, untreated bottom water was incubated as a control, while the obtained results have been used to decouple the remineralization dynamics in the mixture.

The DOC decay had an exponential character. The highest dynamics of DOC remineralization was at the beginning of the experiment and it gradually decreased over time. During the incubation period pore water DOC concentration decreased from 1408 to 850 µmol l-1, which corresponds to almost 40% loss. In the control samples (bottom water) DOC concentration decreased from 304 to 260 µmol l-1 i.e. by ~14%.

In the experiment three different DOC fractions have been identified: labile DOC (DOCL), semi-labile DOC (DOCSL) and refractory DOC (DOCR). To quantify the DOC remineralization rate constants (k) and half-life times (t1/2) the first order kinetics was used. The total bioavailable fraction of pore water DOC (DOCL+DOCSL) amounted to 54%, while k and t1/2 were 0.0958 d-1 and 7.24 d for DOCL and 0.0082 d-1 and 84.53 d for DOCSL, respectively.

This study shows that about half of sediment-derived DOC is bioavailable, which gives a new insight on the Baltic Sea carbon cycle and O­2 consumption in deeper water layers.

How to cite: Lengier, M., Szymczycha, B., and Kuliński, K.: Bioavailability and remineralization of sediment-derived dissolved organic carbon from the Baltic Sea depositional area, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7533, 2021.

EGU21-3431 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Study of the sea ice impact on primary production in the Barents and Kara Seas in past and future climates

Stanislav D. Martyanov, Anton Y. Dvornikov, Vladimir A. Ryabchenko, and Dmitry V. Sein

A regional coupled eco-hydrodynamic model of the Barents and Kara Seas based on the MITgcm has been developed. The biogeochemical module is based on a 7-component model of pelagic biogeochemistry including the ocean carbon cycle. This regional model allows revealing and explaining the main mechanisms of the interaction between marine dynamic and biogeochemical processes in the Barents and Kara Seas under a changing climate. We present the main results of simulations for the past (1975-2005) and future (2035-2065) climate.

A clear relationship between the marginal ice zone area and primary production has been obtained, proving the importance of this zone in the functioning of the marine ecosystem. The interannual variability of the integrated primary production and the total sea ice area demonstrates an antiphase behavior, which means that the reduced sea ice cover area in the previous winter is one of the main reasons for the increase in primary production in the current year.

The model simulations demonstrate that, of all the external factors, sea ice area plays a primary role in the formation of primary production: in the overwhelming majority of cases, the contribution of the ice area prevails, and the pattern "more ice - less primary production" and vice versa is fulfilled in the Barents and Kara Seas. The effect of a decrease of incoming short-wave radiation becomes significant only when a significant decrease of the ice area occurs.

Compared to the period 1975-2005, the simulated total primary production in the Barents and Kara Seas is much higher for the period 2035-2065, while the sea ice area significantly decreases.

A regression dependence has been obtained for the total annual primary production as a function of sea ice area and incoming short-wave radiation. Its validity is verified for both past (dependent) and future (independent) climatic periods. It justifies the use of such simple statistical model for quick estimates of the primary production in the Barents and Kara Seas.

Acknowledgements: The research was performed in the framework of the state assignment of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russia (theme No. 0128-2021-0014). This work used resources of the Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum (DKRZ) granted by its Scientific Steering Committee (WLA) under project ID ba1206.

How to cite: Martyanov, S. D., Dvornikov, A. Y., Ryabchenko, V. A., and Sein, D. V.: Study of the sea ice impact on primary production in the Barents and Kara Seas in past and future climates, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3431, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3431, 2021.

Global warming is one of the most imminent challenges facing humanity in the 21st century. It will not only have a profound effect on ecosystems but also on economies around the world. The shift in habitats of economically important marine species caused by rising seawater temperatures will bring challenges to the existing fishing industry, especially small fishing businesses. This research tries to build mathematical models to find out shifts in herring and mackerel resources in the Northeast Atlantic under global warming, and offer advice on how to deal with potential development challenges.

First, several models are designed to predict the change in seawater temperature over the next 50 years. We base our prediction model on the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) and conduct a detailed analysis of different possible levels of seawater temperature increases caused by different carbon emissions levels. Then the lifecycles and migration behavior of herring and mackerel are researched and the influence of seawater temperature increases on their ecosystems is predicted and charted. The tendency of herring and mackerel populations going further offshore and northerly is obvious.

Second, after analyzing the migration of fish populations, we research the fishing industry in the region and deem it necessary for small fishing companies to make adjustments to their fishing methods. If global warming follows the relatively moderate economic development model, which is the most likely scenario, fish populations will too far away for small fishing companies to harvest near 2091. Our suggested strategy is that fishing vessels capable of operating without land-based support should be increased so that they can operate in waters further from the coast to maintain the harvest.

Finally, the models’ sensitivity is tested, and the results demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of our modeling. This research provides insights into how small fishing companies should relocate themselves to optimize their business, in order to deal with long-term development challenges, and seize the opportunity in fishing under the effects of Global Warming.

How to cite: Zeng, Y.: Shifts in Herring and Mackerel Resources in the Northeast Atlantic under Global Warming, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-327, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-327, 2021.

Restricted basins, such as the Baltic Sea, experience particularly large impact from ongoing global climate change, including severe oxygen depletion, intensified stratification and increased water temperatures. This results in significant and lasting ecosystem alterations. IODP Expedition 347 recovered sediment cores from the Baltic Sea which allow reconstructions of such changes in an as yet unprecedented quality and resolution. We analysed Holocene sediments from the Landsort Deep (IODP Site M0063) using a combined palynological and biogeochemical approach in order to reconstruct palaeoclimate and associated terrestrial and marine ecosystem changes as well as identify anthropogenic influence in the Baltic region. Pollen are used as proxy for terrestrial vegetation changes, including agricultural activity indicated by the presence of cereals. Comparison of pollen data with organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts and other palynomorphs such as the algal taxa Pediastrum, Botryococcus, and Radiosperma from identical samples provides a direct land-sea comparison. These analyses are complemented with the reconstruction of sea surface temperatures (TEXL86, LDI) and mean annual air temperatures (MBT5Me) in the Baltic Sea region. For the late to middle Holocene (~8000 to ~4000 years BP), our data imply a strong brackish-marine influence which decreases around 4000 years BP. A gradually increasing proportion of long-chain n-alkanes around this time indicates a stronger terrestrial influence. Increasing percentages of spruce (Picea) point to the immigration of this taxon in the central Baltic region. Warmth-loving tree taxa such as hazel (Corylus) imply warm conditions between ~5000 and 4000 years BP but subsequently their pollen percentages are decreasing in general. Otherwise our data indicate only minor terrestrial ecosystem changes until ca. 1000 years BP. The past ca. 1000 years witnessed increased agricultural activity, indicated by higher abundances of rye (Secale) pollen, and probably anthropogenically induced deforestation. This increase is paired with high percentages of the enigmatic palynomorph Radiosperma corbiferum. During the past 500 years sea surface temperatures increased significantly, culminating in values comparable to the Holocene Climatic Optimum. Generally, the most rapid changes in the terrestrial ecosystems seem to have happened during the past millennium under anthropogenic influence.

How to cite: Kotthoff, U. and Bauersachs, T.: Reconstructing Holocene palaeoenvironmental conditions in the Baltic: Palynological and biogeochemical data from the Landsort Deep (IODP Expedition 347, Site M0063), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2974, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2974, 2021.

EGU21-15533 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Exploring natural and induced drivers in the Magdalena River discharge impacting the Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta coastal-lagoon ecosystem

Santiago Gómez-Dueñas, Allen Bateman, Germán Santos, and Raúl Sosa

Magdalena's river basin represents a quarter of Colombia's surface, yet neighbouring ecosystems remain ignored while enduring unacceptable environmental conditions. At its outlet in the Caribbean Sea, several channels link it to Cienaga Grande de Santa Marta (CGSM), a deltaic coastal-lagoon ecosystem (4200 km2) from which around 15 to 20 % are water bodies. According to several studies, Magdalena River's overflows represent its primary freshwater source. However, the recorded discharge has gradually reduced, though the basin's rainfall shows a rising tendency. Additional discharge measurements close to the outlet evidenced that it was even lesser than records upstream counterintuitively. Consequently, the energy gradient from the river to the sea through the ecosystem is reversing more frequently. That has resulted in a continuous salinisation process of the lagoons, diminishment of the mangrove forest and lagoons extension, fauna migration and low water quality. This research aims to elaborate on the Magdalena River's outlet discharges vulnerabilities in Colombia, thus providing better insight into impact-based decision-making. 

Results suggest that the discharge regime responds to the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon as it controls the country's dry/rain season. Further analysis indicates that a) low flows relate to El Niño periods and high flows to La Niña; b) the flow duration curve's slope is getting milder, meaning that high flows are decreasing whereas low flows are increasing; c) extreme discharges are getting smoother, and less disperse so that high and low flow peaks are within a smaller range; d) the dispersion diminishes radically during severe El Niño events, and e) although a priori the assumption is that the more severe El Niño events might bring lower discharge values, the minimum values recorded are more significant than in neutral ENSO conditions. 

Moreover, extreme discharge values during ENSO events, despite their severity, tended to have a horizontal asymptote that suggests human-driven control upstream, especially during El Niño periods. The Magdalena basin holds Colombia's hydropower network representing more than 70% of its electricity supply distributed in 33 operating plants. On the one hand, it is clear that during El Niño, the plants guarantee a minimum discharge downstream, as it is when the National Hydrometeorological Agency only considers drought protocols. However, during neutral ENSO conditions, the flows are not controlled and thus, impacts downstream arise. On the other hand, reservoirs have increased evaporation due to a large accumulated open water surface (611 km2 in total). Results show that water loss represents 40% to 80% of the current average discharge at the outlet (7000 m3/s), adding to the ecosystem depletion. The results urge decision-makers to reconsider the drought protocols applying an impact-based approach.

How to cite: Gómez-Dueñas, S., Bateman, A., Santos, G., and Sosa, R.: Exploring natural and induced drivers in the Magdalena River discharge impacting the Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta coastal-lagoon ecosystem, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15533, 2021.

EGU21-14506 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Spanish coast resilience face to storm and beach renourishment monitored from space. 

Anne-Laure Beck and Jara Martinez Sanchez

The increasing storm frequency and strength due to climate change, coupled with human activities along the coast unbalance the coastal dynamics. A constant monitoring is necessary to better understand and mitigate the effect on Spanish coastal environments. Spain has around 8 000 Km of coastal areas along the Iberian Peninsula, the Balearic and Canary island. These coasts have a high coastal geomorphology variability, from rocky coasts with large estuaries on the Atlantic face in the northwest of the Iberian Penisula, to long sandy beaches with dunes systems and large wetlands in the southwest. On the Mediterranean coast, low rocky cliffs and sandy beaches with a wide variety of coastal infrastructures and deltas. Although in-situ measurements are highly efficient on capturing coastal parameters and features at a given time, the cost of continuous acquisition campaigns for the whole coast is dissuasive. Earth Observations provide wide spatial coverage over a large temporal scale allowing us to develop a methodology adapted to all coastal morphologies and dynamics to follow the impact of climate change and human activities on Spain’s top touristic attraction, it’s coasts.

Our developed methodology uses the instantaneous boundary between land and sea on satellite images extracted using an algorithm based on the Liu & Jezek methodology. The use of the Canny edge detection is improved by a local adaptive threshold applied on a band ratio image. NDVI, BNDVI, GNDVI or others are applied depending on coastal features and natures to extract with high precision the land/ sea interface. Is then applied to the obtained waterlines waves, slope and tide correction to obtain inter-comparable lines to build some time-series product at different time scale. The spatial scale of the changes due to coastal dynamics within the coastal environment is a challenge for change detection due to the shifts between earth observations. The application of a geo-location method helps with the spatial accuracy constraint and ensure an accurate change detection by monitoring real movements and therefore allow us to capture coastal change at different temporal and spatial scales.

How to cite: Beck, A.-L. and Martinez Sanchez, J.: Spanish coast resilience face to storm and beach renourishment monitored from space. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14506, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14506, 2021.

EGU21-9518 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Sedimentological and environmental approach of the Llumeres offshore sediments (N Asturias-N Spain)

Germán Flor-Blanco, Efrén García-Ordiales, Raul Ruiz-Quesada, Luis Pando, and Germán Flor

The sedimentological and geochemical evolution of the internal platform located in front of the Llumeres cove (Asturias, North of Spain) has been studied, based on the analysis of selected sediment samples from 5 long corers, approximately 2 m thick, recovered for an offshore structures installation project. In each sample, a granulometric characterization has been carried out by the calculation of granulometric parameters (centile, mean, shorting, etc.) and the mineralogical composition (silica/biogenic carbonates). Geochemical analysis has also been made in the samples.  The enrichment of selected heavy metals and metalloids (Zn, As, Cu, Pb and Hg) has been studied, applying the Geo-accumulation Index (Igeo) and the Enrichment Factor (EF). The results have also been subjected to multivariate and bivariate statistical analyzes that have allowed establishing the relationships between the elements and determining in a preliminary way their potential origin.

The sedimentological results point to the fact that the sediment was incorporated into the internal platform during the last stages of the sea level rise, which began some 20,000 years ago (Pleisto-Holocene transgression). At present, the zone enjoys stability, since no sedimentation is detected. These sediments are relict, without existing agreement with the siliciclastic sedimentation that is taking place at the moment in the coastal zone (Llumeres beach). Three main sandy lithologies have been analyzed: siliciclastic, mixed and carbonate sands which are distributed irregularly in the vertical. This is indicative of changes in the origin of the sediment (siliciclastic, due to the coastal drift current and bioclastic, typical from the platform), as well as the energy of the depositional agent with a clear decrease in size towards the top, detecting relatively large variations in size and the coarse sediments would correspond to moments of storm.

The geochemical results show that the area does not have a remarkable anthropic condition along the sedimentological profile. However, enrichment of some potential contaminants was detected in the more recent sediments (first centimeters of the boreholes), but the enrichment does not appear to pose an environmental risk and their origin seem to be related to nearby areas such as the Nalón River or the industrial area of Aviles that may export contaminants to the marine environment.

How to cite: Flor-Blanco, G., García-Ordiales, E., Ruiz-Quesada, R., Pando, L., and Flor, G.: Sedimentological and environmental approach of the Llumeres offshore sediments (N Asturias-N Spain), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9518, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9518, 2021.

EGU21-14754 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Middle-to late Holocene environmental changes based on a multi-proxy lagoonal record, Klisova lagoon, Greece

Alexandros Emmanouilidis, Konstantinos Panagiotopoulos, Katerina Kouli, and Pavlos Avramidis

Coastal wetlands are dynamic environments prone to climatic and anthropogenic forcing and ideal settings to study past climatic and environmental changes.  In the eastern Mediterranean region and particularly in Greece, the climate presents high spatiotemporal diversity, while human activity is a significant factor in shaping the landscape. This study presents a sediment record from Klisova lagoon, situated in central Greece, at the eastern part of Messolonghi lagoon complex. The area is recorded from antiquity to have great anthropogenic activity. The paleoenvironmental synthesis was based on standard sedimentological analysis (grain size, TOC, magnetic susceptibility), joint micropaleontological and palynological analysis, X-ray Fluorescence scanning, and radiocarbon dating. The Bayesian age-depth model is based on radiocarbon dating and yields an age of 4700 cal BP for the base of the recovered sediment sequence. For the last 4700 years, the freshwater influx, the progradation of the Evinos river delta and related geomorphological changes control the environmental conditions (e.g. depth and salinity) in the lagoon system. Prior to 4000 cal BP, a relatively shallow water depth, significant terrestrial/freshwater input and increased weathering in the lagoon area are inferred. Elemental proxies and increased dinoflagellate and foraminifera abundances, which indicate marine conditions with prominent freshwater influxes, point to the gradual deepening of the lagoon recorded at the drilling site up to 2000 cal BP. The marine and freshwater conditions equilibrium sets at 1300 cal BP, and the lagoonal system seems to reach its present state. Maxima of anthropogenic pollen indicators during the Mycenaean (~3200 cal BP), Hellenistic (~ 2200 cal BP) and Late Byzantine (~ 800 cal BP) periods suggest intervals of increased anthropogenic activities in the study area.  

How to cite: Emmanouilidis, A., Panagiotopoulos, K., Kouli, K., and Avramidis, P.: Middle-to late Holocene environmental changes based on a multi-proxy lagoonal record, Klisova lagoon, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14754, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14754, 2021.

Over a billion people currently live in coastal areas, and coastal urbanization is rapidly growing worldwide. Here, we explore the impact of an extreme and rapid coastal urbanization on near-surface climatic variables, based on MODIS data, Landsat and some in-situ observations. We study Dubai, one of the fastest growing cities in the world over the last two decades. Dubai's urbanization centers along its coastline – in land, massive skyscrapers and infrastructure have been built, while in sea, just nearby, unique artificial islands have been constructed.

Studying the coastline during the years of intense urbanization (2001-2014), we show that the coastline exhibits surface urban heat island characteristics, where the urban center experiences higher temperatures, by as much as 2.0°C and more, compared to the adjacent less urbanized zones. During development, the coastal surface urban heat island has nearly doubled its size, expanding towards the newly developed areas. This newly developed zone also exhibited the largest temperature trend along the coast, exceeding 0.1°C/year on average.

Overall, we found that over land, temperature increases go along with albedo decreases, while in sea, surface temperature decreases and albedo increases were observed particularly over the artificial islands. These trends in land and sea temperatures affect the land-sea temperature gradient which influences the breeze intensity. The above findings, along with the increasing relative humidity shown, directly affect the local population and ecosystem and add additional burden to this area, which is already considered as one of the warmest in the world and a climate change 'hot spot'.

 

References:

E. Elhacham and P. Alpert, "Impact of coastline-intensive anthropogenic activities on the atmosphere from moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) data in Dubai (2001–2014)", Earth’s Future, 4, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/2015EF000325

E. Elhacham and P. Alpert, "Temperature patterns along an arid coastline experiencing extreme and rapid urbanization, case study: Dubai", submitted.

How to cite: Elhacham, E. and Alpert, P.: Effects of Dubai coastline extreme urbanization in land and sea on local near-surface climate variables patterns, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6348, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6348, 2021.

EGU21-15481 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Combining current velocity data from different sources as input to coastal zone management

Jenny Ullgren and Anne Stene

Sustainable development of the aquaculture industry depends on wise coastal zone management.  Aquaculture in Norway is typically found in small, rural municipalities that may lack expertise in marine ecology. In the project “Precise coastal zone planning with focus on aquaculture” we combine marine maps with in situ data and model results to produce a management tool for easier and more efficent aquaculture planning.

Our study area comprises five municipalities in Western Norway and includes both fjords and open coast. High resolution marine maps exist for the area. We also have access to environmental assessments from aquaculture sites, sediment samples for Total Organic Carbon (TOC), and current velocity time series from oceanographic moorings. We will compare the in situ data with output from two current models (Sinmod and NorKyst-800). The data will be used to produce thematic maps of key characteristics, mainly current and organic carbon content, to help administrators identify areas suitable for different types of aquaculture.

Here, we present results from in situ measurements that will provide the current velocity input to the thematic maps. Data from seven oceanographic moorings placed in the fjord system show the current variability on time scales from hours to years. In addition we have done four 1-month deployments of a current profiler on sites selected to improve the geographical data coverage. We show preliminary results and discuss the challenges in simplifying variable current fields in an area with complex geography into an overall map.

How to cite: Ullgren, J. and Stene, A.: Combining current velocity data from different sources as input to coastal zone management, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15481, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15481, 2021.

EGU21-16024 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Mapping pond aquaculture for the entire coastal zone of Asia using high resolution Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 data 

Marco Ottinger, Felix Bachofer, and Juliane Huth

Asia is the world’s most important region for aquaculture and generates almost 90 percent of the total production. The farming of fish and shrimp in land-based aquaculture systems expanded mainly along the shorelines of South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia, and is a primary protein source for millions of people. The production of fish and shrimp in freshwater and brackish water ponds in coastal regions of Asia has increased rapidly since the 1990s due to the rising demand for protein-rich foods from a growing (world) population. The aquaculture sector generates income, employment and contributes to food security, has become a billion-dollar industry with high socio-economic value, but has also led to severe environmental degradation. In this regard, geospatial information on aquaculture can support the management of this growing food sector for the sustainable development of coastal ecosystems, resources and human health.

With free and open access to the rapidly growing volume of data from the European Sentinel satellites as well as using machine learning algorithms and cloud computing services, we extracted coastal aquaculture at a continental-scale. We present a multi-sensor approach which utilizes Earth Observation time series data for the mapping of pond aquaculture within the entire Asian coastal zone, defined as a buffer of 200km from the coastline. In this research, we developed an object-based framework to detect and extract aquaculture at single pond level based on temporal features derived from high spatial resolution SAR and optical satellite acquired from the Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 satellites. In a second step, we performed spatial and statistical data analyses of the Earth observation derived aquaculture dataset to investigate spatial distribution and to identify production hotspots in various administrative units at regional, national, and sub-national scale.

How to cite: Ottinger, M., Bachofer, F., and Huth, J.: Mapping pond aquaculture for the entire coastal zone of Asia using high resolution Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 data , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16024, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16024, 2021.

Atlantic salmon swim upstream from the North sea through Frierfjorden to spawn in the Skien watershed, the third largest in Norway. There are two hydroelectric power plants in the lower reaches of the Skienselva: Klosterfoss and Skotfoss. Salmon caught swimming up the fish ladder at the downstream power plant (Klosterfoss) were tagged, released, and at the downstream power plant tracked from the beginning of the upstream migration to the end of the spawning period in the entire anadromous watershed. Salmon spent unequal amounts of time at the four spawning areas in the main river and a tributary between Klosterfoss and Skotfoss. Salmon spent less time at the larger spawning site, Vadrette, compared to the smaller Fossum and Grøtsund spawning sites. 26% of tagged salmon which swam upstream to the Skotfoss hydroelectric power plant ascended the fish ladder. Further, 16% of all salmon ascended the fish ladder at Skotfoss and continued to upstream spawning sites, indicating that they were homing to sites in the upper watershed. This is much smaller than the what is expected based on the fry populations in the rivers of the Skien watershed, which are augmented by yearly stocking in some of the rivers. Salmon which ascended the Klosterfoss ladder relatively early, swam upstream to Skotfoss more quickly than salmon that arrived relatively late at the Klosterfoss ladder. Short and repeated movements upstream to Skotfoss, and downstream to areas in the Farelva, and back again to Skotfoss were observed in the majority of tagged salmon that approached Skotfoss. The “yo-yo” migration of salmon in the Farelva is for the most part unexplained, but the movement costs the salmon valuable energy before and during the spawning season and may have negative consequences. Overall, these results indicate that salmon find the entrance to the fish ladder and do not remain stuck at the tunnel outlet, but most do not successfully ascend it. This could be the result of poor ladder construction, too low flow from the ladder, low survival of fry from upstream of Skotfoss reducing the number of salmon that are homing to upstream spawning areas, or that not all salmon which approach Skotfoss are homing to areas above the ladder. The possibility exists that salmon which will eventually spawn in areas downstream of the ladder engage in searching behavior near the fish ladder. If efforts to restore the populations in the upper watershed are to continue, issues salmon have with ascending the Skotfoss fish ladder must be addressed first.

How to cite: Schwert, S.: Adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) spawning migration and behaviour in the lower Skienselva, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10384, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10384, 2021.

EGU21-11993 | vPICO presentations | CL2.12

Prototype products for climate change adaption in German coastal regions

Birte-Marie Ehlers, Frank Janssen, and Jian Su

The “German Strategy for Adaption to Climate Change” (DAS) is the political framework to climate change adaption in Germany. The newly established DAS basic service “Climate and Water” will provide monitoring and projection data to evaluate requirements for climate change adaption. Various products covering the German water bodies (coastal and inland) and its response to climate change will be generated and frequently updated by a cooperation of four German federal agencies. The products will be tailored to a variety of stakeholders needs.

Within this framework, the Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH) will provide products based on an ensemble of climate projections for the German coast which will be created in cooperation with different research institutes and authorities, e.g. the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI).

Data from a DMI climate projection run based on the HIROMB-BOOS model (HBM) with a meteorological forcing from DMI-HIRHAM5 (one of the RCMs in EURO-CORDEX ensemble) and for the RCP 8.5 scenarios has been analysed in view of different oceanographic parameters such as sea level, sea surface temperature, salinity, currents and ice. This data set includes the historical periods 1981-2010 and the RCP 8.5 periods 2041-2070 and 2071-2100. Therefore, it provides an expedient basis to develop prototype products regarding climate change adaption at the German coasts for customers of the DAS basic service “Climate and Water”. The initial prototype products are presented and discussed in regards to the sufficiency to evaluate requirements for climate change adaption.

How to cite: Ehlers, B.-M., Janssen, F., and Su, J.: Prototype products for climate change adaption in German coastal regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11993, 2021.

In a series of ad-hoc surveys, students and young scholars from various institutions in the Baltic Sea region are asked about their perceptions about the reality and seriousness of climate change, and how these compare to other pressures on the Baltic Sea. The same questionnaire, albeit adopted to the different nationalities, have been run in Sweden, Denmark, Poland and Germany, among students with different backgrounds, such as oceanography, geography, environmental sciences and chemistry. The surveys were done in 2019, 2020 and 2021. While the individual surveys at the different institutes can not be considered representative, the ensemble of the so far 7 surveys provides a consistent summary of what is common understanding, and which issues may be considered less uniformly.

Climate, eutrophication and disposal of waste are listed most often as serious issues, while overfishing and tourism less often, and the construction of bridges and pipelines are least often chosen as serious issue. Climate issues are mostly not considered a scientific issue but a public/political issue, and climate science is mostly tasked with “motivate people to act on climate change” or “determine solutions to climate change” but less so with “define the climate problems and attribute cause of climate change”.

How to cite: von Storch, H.: Perceptions among students and young scholars of drivers endangering the Baltic Sea., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-814, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-814, 2021.

CL2.13 – ENSO and Tropical Basins Interactions: Dynamics, Predictability and Modelling

EGU21-3340 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

What warms the warmest waters during El Niño?

Allison Hogikyan, Stephan Fueglistaler, and Laure Resplandy

During El Niño, the upwelling in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) slows, leading to a warm sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly, and the tropical troposphere warms. Only SSTs in regions with atmospheric deep convection, typically the warmest SSTs, affect the temperature of the tropical free troposphere. The warming of the EEP, which is home to the coldest tropical SSTs and does not experience atmospheric convection, therefore appears insufficient to explain the observed warming of the troposphere. Here, we examine the physical processes that lead to the warming of the warmest SSTs using both a global atmosphere-ocean coupled climate model and the ECMWF reanalysis. We show that SSTs in convecting regions do not warm as a result of ocean dynamics (upwelling), but as a result of a net heat flux from the atmosphere to the ocean following a weakening of surface winds and decrease in evaporation. This increased ocean heat uptake in convecting regions opposes the decrease in ocean heat uptake in the rest of the tropics during El Nino. This process may be important for linking surface temperature to ocean heat uptake changes, and the contribution of internal variability in the form of ENSO and IPO to the forced response observed over the historical record.

How to cite: Hogikyan, A., Fueglistaler, S., and Resplandy, L.: What warms the warmest waters during El Niño?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3340, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3340, 2021.

EGU21-9593 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

ENSO asymmetry: the search for extreme El Niño events in HadGEM

Sarah Ineson, Nick Dunstone, Adam Scaife, and Kuniko Yamazaki

Analysis of a long control run of the Hadley Centre coupled model shows that ENSO asymmetry is weak. We use the same model in our seasonal and decadal prediction systems, and while on seasonal timescales the initialised prediction realistically captures the amplitude of extreme El Niño events, on longer timescales the predictions revert to the control behaviour i.e. there are no very large El Niño events. This may impact on our ability evaluate the risk of extreme regional events. Here we show results exploring asymmetry in both the control model, and also from a number of perturbed parameter experiments, each a plausible realisation of the control.

How to cite: Ineson, S., Dunstone, N., Scaife, A., and Yamazaki, K.: ENSO asymmetry: the search for extreme El Niño events in HadGEM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9593, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9593, 2021.

A recent high-resolution ocean model study of the strong El Ninos of 1982-1983 and 1997-1998 highlighted a previously neglected ocean mechanism which was active during their growth.   The mechanism involved a weakening of both the Equatorial Current and the tropical instability eddies in mid-ocean.  It also involved an increase in the strength of the North Equatorial Counter Current due to the passage of the annual Rossby wave.

      This presentation reports how satellite altimeter and satellite SST data was used to validate the model results the key areas, confirming the changes in the current and eddy fields and the resulting eastward extension of the region of highest SST values.  The SST changes were sufficient to trigger new regions deep-atmospheric convection and so had the potential to have a significant impact on the development of the El Nino and the resulting changes in the large scale atmospheric circulation.

How to cite: Webb, D., Coward, A., and Snaith, H.: Using Satellite Altimeter and SST Observations of the 1997-1998 El Nino to Check the Key Ocean Processes Involved in a Strong El Nino., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-297, 2021.

EGU21-2935 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Energy Export from the Tropical Pacific via the Atmosphere – a Lagrangian Perspective

Katharina Baier, Andreas Stohl, Michael Mayer, and Leopold Haimberger

The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is linked with energy exchange between the ocean, atmosphere and space. By using the particle dispersion model FLEXPART the atmospheric energy transport originating from the Tropical Pacific is analysed, with special focus on the connection to the Atlantic Ocean during El Niño. The Lagrangian model was filled homogeneously with five million, globally distributed particles, which were then traced forward in time from 1990 until 2016. Due to the domain-filling option used in FLEXPART, the particles represent the atmospheric mass transport. From this 26 year-long Lagrangian Reanalysis Dataset, particles between 5°S-5°N and 170°W-100°W were selected and followed both forward and backward in time. Therefore, the source regions of the energy and moisture in the Tropical Pacific can be detected, but also where they are further transported. Special focus is placed on the connection to the Atlantic Ocean. By analysing the different forms of energy (potential, - internal, - and latent energy), their transport from the Tropical Pacific into the Atlantic Ocean can be quantified. In addition, the differences between El Niño and La Niña are studied, as well as strong and weak El Niño cases.

How to cite: Baier, K., Stohl, A., Mayer, M., and Haimberger, L.: Energy Export from the Tropical Pacific via the Atmosphere – a Lagrangian Perspective, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2935, 2021.

EGU21-5146 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

El Niño Index forecasting using machine learning techniques 

Wanjiao Song, Wenfang Lu, and Qing Dong

El Niño is a large-scale ocean-atmospheric coupling phenomenon in the Pacific. The interaction among marine and atmospheric variables over the tropical Pacific modulate the evolution of El Niño. The latest research shows that machine learning and neural network (NN) have appeared as effective tools to achieve meaningful information from multiple marine and atmospheric parameters. In this paper, we aim to predict the El Niño index more accurately and increase the forecast efficiency of El Niño events. Here, we propose an approach combining a neural network technique with long short-term memory (LSTM) neural network to forecast El Niño phenomenon. The attributes of model are resulted from physical explanation which are tested with the experiments and observations. The neural network represents the connection among multiple variables and machine learning creates models to identify the El Niño events. The preliminary experimental results exhibit that training NN-LSTM model on network metrics time series dataset provides great potential for predicting El Niño phenomenon at lag times of up to more than 6 months.  

How to cite: Song, W., Lu, W., and Dong, Q.: El Niño Index forecasting using machine learning techniques , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5146, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5146, 2021.

EGU21-12362 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

A data-driven generative model for sea surface temperature fields in the tropical Pacific

Jakob Schlör and Bedartha Goswami

The most dominant mode of oceanic climate variability on an interannual scale is the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), which is characterized by anomalous sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the equatorial Pacific. The SST fields associated with ENSO show strong variability between different events, also known as ENSO diversity. While the diversity of SST patterns have a strong impact on local climate, ecosystem and society, the spatial differences between ENSO events are not yet fully understood.

In this work, we present a data-driven approach to model SST anomaly patterns in the Pacific using a deep generative model. In particular, we use a variational autoencoder (VAE) to nonlinearly decompose the monthly SST anomalies into a low dimensional ‘latent’ space. VAEs are probabilistic models with neural network transition functions which allow us to model nonlinear features, quantify uncertainty, and include prior knowledge. In our approach, we use mutual information to favor a disentangled latent space with respect to a ground truth derived from correlation-based spatial SST clustering. The VAE-based approach improves upon earlier non-linear dimensionality reduction methods like kernel PCA which only optimize for statistical properties.

Our results indicate that the anomalous SST field diversity can be explained primarily by 1) an eastern equatorial Pacific component, 2) a central equatorial Pacific component and 3) a transequatorial component. The components capture underlying spatial correlations to regions in the Northern Pacific and to the basin wide horseshoe pattern. We also observe an asymmetry between the warm and cool phases of the components.

How to cite: Schlör, J. and Goswami, B.: A data-driven generative model for sea surface temperature fields in the tropical Pacific, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12362, 2021.

EGU21-3190 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Skillful prediction of tropical Pacific fisheries provided by Atlantic Niños

Iñigo Gómara, Belén Rodríguez-Fonseca, Elsa Mohino, Teresa Losada, Irene Polo, and Marta Coll

Tropical Pacific upwelling-dependent ecosystems are the most productive and variable worldwide, mainly due to the influence of El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). ENSO can be forecasted seasons ahead thanks to assorted climate precursors (local-Pacific processes, pantropical interactions). However, owing to observational data scarcity and bias-related issues in earth system models, little is known about the importance of these precursors for marine ecosystem prediction. With recently released reanalysis-nudged global marine ecosystem simulations, these constraints can be sidestepped, allowing full examination of tropical Pacific ecosystem predictability. By complementing historical fishing records with marine ecosystem model data, we show herein that equatorial Atlantic Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) constitute a superlative predictability source for tropical Pacific marine yields, which can be forecasted over large-scale areas up to 2 years in advance. A detailed physical-biological mechanism is proposed whereby Atlantic SSTs modulate upwelling of nutrient-rich waters in the tropical Pacific, leading to a bottom-up propagation of the climate-related signal across the marine food web. Our results represent historical and near-future climate conditions and provide a useful springboard for implementing a marine ecosystem prediction system in the tropical Pacific.

How to cite: Gómara, I., Rodríguez-Fonseca, B., Mohino, E., Losada, T., Polo, I., and Coll, M.: Skillful prediction of tropical Pacific fisheries provided by Atlantic Niños, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3190, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3190, 2021.

EGU21-13911 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Warming of the Indian Ocean weakens the Atlantic Niño - El Niño Southern Oscillation connection 

Shreya Dhame, Andréa Taschetto, Agus Santoso, Giovanni Liguori, and Katrin Meissner

The tropical Indian Ocean has warmed by 1 degree Celsius since the mid-twentieth century. This warming is likely to continue as the atmospheric carbon dioxide levels keep rising. Here, we discuss how the warming trend could influence the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) via interaction with the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean mean state and variability. The warming trend leads to the strengthening of easterlies in the western equatorial Pacific, subsequent downwelling and increase of the mixed later depth in the west, and an increase in the subsurface temperature gradient across the equatorial Pacific. In the eastern equatorial Pacific, the response of upwelling ocean currents to surface wind stress decreases, resulting in a weakening of ENSO amplitude. The Indian Ocean warming influences ENSO via the Atlantic Ocean as well. There, it is associated with the strengthening of equatorial easterly winds, and anomalous warming in the west and upwelling induced cooling in the east, especially in austral winter, during the peak of the Atlantic Niño. Consequently, this results in a decrease of the amplitude of Atlantic Niño events and weakening of the Atlantic Niño-ENSO teleconnection, thereby hindering the transition of El Niño events to La Niña events. Thus, the Indian Ocean warming trend is found to modulate tropical Pacific and Atlantic mean state and variability, with implications for ENSO predictability under a warming climate.

How to cite: Dhame, S., Taschetto, A., Santoso, A., Liguori, G., and Meissner, K.: Warming of the Indian Ocean weakens the Atlantic Niño - El Niño Southern Oscillation connection , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13911, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13911, 2021.

EGU21-2881 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

ENSO response to changes in the tropical Indian ocean temperature

Brady Ferster, Alexey Fedorov, Juliette Mignot, and Eric Guilyardi

Since the start of the 21st century, El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability has changed, supporting generally weaker Central Pacific El Niño events. Recent studies suggest that stronger trade winds in the equatorial Pacific could be a key driving force contributing to this shift. One possible mechanism to drive such changes in the mean tropical Pacific climate state is the enhanced warming trends in the tropical Indian Ocean (TIO) relative to the rest of the tropics. TIO warming can affect the Walker circulation in both the Pacific and Atlantic basins by inducing quasi-stationary Kelvin and Rossby wave patterns. Using the latest coupled-model from Insitut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL-CM6), ensemble experiments are conducted to investigate the effect of TIO sea surface temperature (SST) on ENSO variability. Applying a weak SST nudging over the TIO region, in four ensemble experiments we change mean Indian ocean SST by -1.4°C, -0.7°C, +0.7°C, and +1.4°C and find that TIO warming changes the magnitude of the mean equatorial Pacific zonal wind stress proportionally to the imposed forcing, with stronger trades winds corresponding to a warmer TIO. Surprisingly, ENSO variability increases in both TIO cooling and warming experiments, relative to the control. While a stronger ENSO for weaker trade winds, associated with TIO cooling, is expected from previous studies, we argue that the ENSO strengthening for stronger trade winds, associated with TIO cooling, is related to the induced changes in ocean stratification. We illustrate this effect by computing different contributions to the Bjerknes stability index. Thus, our results suggest that the tropical Indian ocean temperatures are an important regulator of TIO mean state and ENSO dynamics.

How to cite: Ferster, B., Fedorov, A., Mignot, J., and Guilyardi, E.: ENSO response to changes in the tropical Indian ocean temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2881, 2021.

The predictability of El Niño and La Niña is investigated. In this case, the recently discovered so-called Global Atmospheric Oscillation (GAO) is considered (Serykh et al., 2019). Assuming GAO to be the main mode of short-term climatic variability, this study defines an index that characterizes the dynamics and relationships of the extratropical components of the GAO and El Niño – Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Due to the general propagation of the GAO’s spatial structure from west to east, another index – predictor of ENSO is defined. The cross-wavelet analysis between both of these indices and the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) is performed. This analysis reveals a range of timescales within which the closest relationship between the GAO and ONI takes place. Using this relationship, it is possible to predict El Niño and La Niña with a lead-time of approximately 12 months (Serykh and Sonechkin, 2020a).

Using data on the distribution of temperatures in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic Oceans, large-scale structures of spatial and temporal variations of these temperatures are investigated (Serykh and Sonechkin, 2020b). A structure is found which is almost identical to the spatial and temporal sea surface temperature (SST) structure that is characteristic of the GAO. Variations in water temperature in a near-equatorial zone of the Pacific Ocean at depths up to about 150 meters behave themselves in the same way as variations in sea surface height and SST. At even greater depths, variations in water temperature reveal a "striped" structure, which is, however, overall similar to that of SST variations. Variations of water temperature at depths in all three oceans spread from east to west along the equator with a period of 14 months. This makes it possible to think that the dynamics of these temperatures are controlled by the so-called Pole tides. The surface North Pacific Pole Tide was found previously responsible for excitation of El Niño (Serykh and Sonechkin, 2019). The deep Pole tides in the Southern Atlantic and Southern Indian Ocean appear to be triggers of the Atlantic El Niño and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD). Thus, IOD manifests itself at the depth of the thermocline more clearly than on the surface of the Indian Ocean. The out-of-phase behavior of El Niño and IOD is explained by the 180-degree difference in the longitudes of these phenomena.

 

References

Serykh I.V., Sonechkin D.M. Nonchaotic and globally synchronized short-term climatic variations and their origin // Theoretical and Applied Climatology. 2019. Vol. 137. No. 3-4. pp 2639–2656. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00704-018-02761-0

Serykh I.V., Sonechkin D.M., Byshev V.I., Neiman V.G., Romanov Yu.A. Global Atmospheric Oscillation: An Integrity of ENSO and Extratropical Teleconnections // Pure and Applied Geophysics. 2019. Vol. 176. pp 3737–3755. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-019-02182-8

Serykh I.V., Sonechkin D.M. El Niño forecasting based on the global atmospheric oscillation // International Journal of Climatology. 2020a. https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.6488

Serykh I.V., Sonechkin D.M. Interrelations between temperature variations in oceanic depths and the Global atmospheric oscillation // Pure and Applied Geophysics. 2020b. Vol. 177. pp 5951–5967. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-020-02615-9

How to cite: Serykh, I. and Sonechkin, D.: Interactions of temperature fluctuations of the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic oceans with Global atmospheric oscillation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-232, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-232, 2021.

EGU21-3477 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Impacts of Atlantic Multidecadal Variability on the Tropical Pacific: a multi-model study

Yohan Ruprich-Robert and the the AMV - Tropical Pacific study team

The Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV) has been linked to the observed slowdown of global warming over 1998-2012 through its impact on the tropical Pacific. Given the global importance of tropical Pacific variability, better understanding this Atlantic-Pacific teleconnection is key for improving climate predictions, but the robustness and strength of this link is uncertain. Analysing a multi-model set of sensitivity experiments, we find that models differ by a factor 10 in simulating the amplitude of the Equatorial Pacific cooling response to observed AMV warming. The inter-model spread is mainly driven by different amounts of moist static energy injection from the tropical Atlantic surface into the upper troposphere. We reduce this inter-model uncertainty by analytically correcting models for their mean precipitation biases and we quantify that, following an observed 0.26ºC AMV warming, the equatorial Pacific cools by 0.16ºC with an inter-model standard deviation of 0.03ºC.

How to cite: Ruprich-Robert, Y. and the the AMV - Tropical Pacific study team: Impacts of Atlantic Multidecadal Variability on the Tropical Pacific: a multi-model study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3477, 2021.

EGU21-12790 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Global modulation of ENSO teleconnections by Pacific Decadal Variability

Nicola Maher, Antonietta Capotondi, and Jennifer Kay

The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the leading mode of global climate variability on interannual timescales. On longer time-scales, decadal variability in the Pacific is responsible for modulating the rate of global warming (Meehl et al 2013, Maher et al 2014 Henley & King 2017). Whether Pacific Decadal Variability (PDV) modulates ENSO teleconnections is an important research question that has largely been investigated using the observational record. PDV is shown to modulate Australian rainfall (Power et al 1999, Arblaster et al 2002, Verdon et al, 2004, King et al 2013), which has impacts for flood frequency (Franks and Kuczera, 2002, Kiem et al, 2003, Pui et al 2011). PDV has also been shown to modulate ENSO precipitation teleconnections over Africa (Dong & Dai 2015), Texas (Khedun et al 2014), and Europe (Zanchettin et al 2008) as well as ENSO temperature teleconnections over New Zealand (Salinger et al 2001). While these observationally based studies suggest connections between ENSO teleconnections and PDV, the short observational record contains only two PDV phase changes. In addition, calculating PDV using a lowpass filter on the region that contains ENSO could also cause statistical artefacts in the results (Power at al, 2006, Westra et al 2015). These limitations can be addressed using climate models. Arblaster et al (2002) use atmosphere only simulations and find similar results to observational studies over Australia. Dong and Dai (2015) further investigate global modulation using 4 ensemble members of a single model. These modelling studies are limited in their use of single models and while they include a larger dataset than the observational record, previous work has only used small ensemble sizes. In this study, we address both the issue of small datasets and the dependence on results on the model used by utilising four single model initial-condition large ensembles.  Each model ensemble has a minimum of 20 members enabling investigation of multiple realizations of PDV and ENSO covariability. Over the historical period, using one ensemble member results in a record that is indeed too short to accurately quantify the influence of PDV on ENSO teleconnections. We then composite events for different phases of the PDV and ENSO using all ensemble members. Initial results show that PDV strongly influences ENSO temperature teleconnections over North America.  We find that stronger teleconnections occur when an El Niño occurs during a positive phase of PDV or a La Niña occurs in a negative phase of the PDV. Similarly, PDV phase affects precipitation over Australia, where co-occurring El Niño and positive PDV phases and La Niña and negative PDV phases have larger precipitation anomalies. Finally we investigate whether this modulation of ENSO teleconnections by the PDV is projected to change under strong anthropogenic forcing. We find greater inter-model agreement for precipitation teleconnections than for temperature teleconnections.  Ongoing work will assess the underlying physical mechanisms behind these results. 

How to cite: Maher, N., Capotondi, A., and Kay, J.: Global modulation of ENSO teleconnections by Pacific Decadal Variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12790, 2021.

EGU21-4025 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Minimal impact of model biases on northern hemisphere ENSO teleconnections.

Nicholas Tyrrell and Alexey Karpechko

Correctly capturing the teleconnection between the ENSO and Europe is of importance for seasonal prediction. Here we investigate how systematic model biases may affect this teleconnection. A two–step bias–correction process is applied to an atmospheric general circulation model to reduce errors in the climatology. The bias–corrections are applied to the troposphere and stratosphere separately and together to produce a range of climates. ENSO type sensitivity experiments are then performed to reveal the impact of differing climatologies on ENSO–Europe teleconnections.

The bias–corrections do not affect the response of the tropical atmosphere, nor the Aleutian Low, to strong ENSO anomalies. However, the anomalous upward wave flux and the response of the northern hemisphere polar vortex differs between the climatologies. We attribute this to a reduced sensitivity of waves to the strength of the Aleutian Low. Despite the differing responses of the polar vortex, the NAO response is similar between the climatologies, implying that for strong ENSO events the stratospheric response may not be the primary driver for the ENSO–North Atlantic teleconnection.

How to cite: Tyrrell, N. and Karpechko, A.: Minimal impact of model biases on northern hemisphere ENSO teleconnections., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4025, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4025, 2021.

EGU21-7483 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Non-linearity in the pathway of El Niño-Southern Oscillation to the tropical North Atlantic

Jake W. Casselman, Andréa S. Taschetto, and Daniela I.V. Domeisen

El Niño-Southern Oscillation can influence the Tropical North Atlantic (TNA), leading to anomalous sea surface temperatures (SST) at a lag of several months. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain this teleconnection. These mechanisms include both tropical and extratropical pathways, contributing to anomalous trade winds and static stability over the TNA region. The TNA SST response to ENSO has been suggested to be nonlinear. Yet the overall linearity of the ENSO-TNA teleconnection via the two pathways remains unclear. Here we use reanalysis data to confirm that the SST anomaly (SSTA) in the TNA is nonlinear with respect to the strength of the SST forcing in the tropical Pacific, as further increases in El Niño magnitudes cease to create further increases of the TNA SSTA. We further show that the tropical pathway is more linear than the extratropical pathway by sub-dividing the inter-basin connection into extratropical and tropical pathways. The extratropical pathway is modulated by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the location of the SSTA in the Pacific, but this modulation insufficiently explains the nonlinearity in TNA SSTA. As neither extratropical nor tropical pathways can explain the nonlinearity, this suggests that external factors are at play. Further analysis shows that the TNA SSTA is highly influenced by the preconditioning of the tropical Atlantic SST. This preconditioning is found to be associated with the NAO through SST-tripole patterns.

How to cite: Casselman, J. W., Taschetto, A. S., and Domeisen, D. I. V.: Non-linearity in the pathway of El Niño-Southern Oscillation to the tropical North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7483, 2021.

EGU21-10482 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

The relationship between the El Niño Southern Oscillation and Australian monsoon rainfall on decadal time-scales

Hanna Heidemann, Joachim Ribbe, Benjamin J. Henley, Tim Cowan, Christa Pudmenzky, Roger Stone, and David H. Cobon

This research analyses the observed relationship between eastern and central Pacific El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events and Australian monsoon rainfall (AUMR) on a decadal timescale during the December to March monsoon months. To assess the decadal influence of the different flavours of ENSO on the AUMR, we focus on the phases of the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO) over the period 1920 to 2020.  The AUMR is characterized by substantial decadal variability, which appears to be linked to the positive and negative phases of the IPO. During the past two historical negative IPO phases, significant correlations have been observed between central Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies and AUMR over both the northeast and northwest of Australia. This central Pacific SST-AUMR relationship has strengthened from the first negative IPO phase (mid-1940s to the mid-1970s) to the second (late 1990s to mid-2010s), while the eastern Pacific SST-AUMR influence has weakened. Composite rainfall anomalies over Australia reveal a different response of AUMR to central Pacific El Niño/La Niña and eastern Pacific La Niña events during positive IPO and negative IPO phases. This research clearly shows that ENSO's influence on AUMR is modulated by Pacific decadal variability, however this teleconnection, in itself, can change between similar decadal Pacific states.  Going forward, as decadal prediction systems improve and become more mainstream, the IPO phase could be used as a potential source for decadal predictability of the tendency of AUMR.  

How to cite: Heidemann, H., Ribbe, J., Henley, B. J., Cowan, T., Pudmenzky, C., Stone, R., and Cobon, D. H.: The relationship between the El Niño Southern Oscillation and Australian monsoon rainfall on decadal time-scales, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10482, 2021.

EGU21-5240 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Uncertainties in SST datasets and implications for El Niño event classification

Mengke Zhu, Jonathon Wright, Maryam Ilyas, and Chris Brierley

Identification of El Niño warm events and their types has traditionally been deterministic, based mainly on whether a pre-defined index exceeded a critical value. However, uncertainties in both sea surface temperature (SST) measurements and their interpolation into a gridded analysis can impact identification of and confidence in El Niño variability, particularly earlier in the record. Although several different classification methods for El Niño exist, researchers lack an effective reference and evaluation system to identify advantages and disadvantages of a given index for a given application. Therefore, this study quantifies the impacts of both data- and method-related uncertainties on different El Niño classification methods, considering different types of uncertainty, different types of analysis, different teleconnection mechanisms and expressions of El Niño impact and different types of climate data. To aid in these objectives, El Niño classification methods are evaluated from five aspects: reliability, accuracy, precision, flexibility, and simplicity. The core analysis is based on probabilistic, uncertainty-aware classifications applied to a large ensemble of historical SST realizations. The results are then used to conduct a more general evaluation of how different types of uncertainty propagate through the different classification methods, and provide guidance on the strengths and weaknesses of these indices for different applications.

How to cite: Zhu, M., Wright, J., Ilyas, M., and Brierley, C.: Uncertainties in SST datasets and implications for El Niño event classification, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5240, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5240, 2021.

EGU21-6952 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Persistent El Nino driven shifts in marine cyanobacteria populations

Alyse Larkin, Allison Moreno, Adam Fagan, and Adam Martiny

From 2014 through 2016, a significant El Niño event and the North Pacific warm anomaly (a.k.a., “the blob”) resulted in a marine heatwave across the Eastern North Pacific Ocean. To develop a deeper understanding of the impacts of El Niño on the Southern California Bight (SCB), we used coastal cyanobacteria populations in order to “bi-directionally” link shifts in microbial diversity and biogeochemical conditions. We sequenced the rpoC1 gene from the ecologically important picocyanobacteria Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus at 434 time points from 2009–2018 in the MICRO time series at Newport Beach, CA. Across the time series, we observed an increase in the abundance of Prochlorococcus relative to Synechococcus as well as elevated frequencies of clades commonly associated with low-nutrient and high-temperature conditions. The relationships between environmental and diversity trends appeared to operate on differing temporal scales. In addition, microdiverse populations from the Prochlorococcous HLI clade as well as Synechococcus Clade II that shifted in response to the 2015 El Niño did not return to their pre-heatwave composition by the end of this study. This research demonstrates that El Niño-driven warming in the SCB can result in persistent changes in key microbial populations.

How to cite: Larkin, A., Moreno, A., Fagan, A., and Martiny, A.: Persistent El Nino driven shifts in marine cyanobacteria populations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6952, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6952, 2021.

Climate change, in particular the rise in tropical sea surface temperatures, is the greatest threat to coral reef ecosystems today and causes climatic extremes affecting the livelihood of tropical societies. The combination of long-term global warming and interannual El Niño-related warm events has severely affected corals and coral reefs throughout the tropical ocean basins. Mass coral bleaching, a result of large-scale temperature stress, was first observed during the 1982/83 El Niño, and was followed by much more severe, global scale bleaching events during the El Niño years of 1997/98 and 2010, culminating in the most wide-spread and most destructive global bleaching episode to date, which lasted from 2014-2017. The interval between recurrent mass coral bleaching events driven by anomalously high sea surface temperatures is becoming too short for a full recovery of mature coral reef assemblages and will have dramatic effects on future coral reef growth. Assessing how future warming will change coral reef ecosystems and tropical climate variability is therefore of extreme urgency.

The recently established Priority Programme „Tropical Climate Variability and Coral Reefs – A Past to Future Perspective on Current Rates of Change at Ultra-High Resolution“ (SPP 2299; https://www.spp2299.tropicalclimatecorals.de/) of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) aims to enhance our current understanding of tropical marine climate variability and its impact on coral reef ecosystems in a warming world, by quantifying climatic and environmental changes during both the ongoing warming and past warm periods on timescales relevant for society. Ultra-high resolution coral geochemistry provides a tool to understand the temporal response of corals and coral reefs to ongoing climate and environmental change, to reconstruct past tropical climate and environmental variability and to use these data in conjunction with advanced statistical methods, earth system modelling and observed ecosystem responses for improved projections of future changes in tropical climate and coral reef ecosystems.

The Priority Programme is organised around three major research topics in order to fuel interdisciplinary collaboration among various disciplines: (a) Large-scale ocean, climate & environment reconstructions, (b) Coral & reef-scale response to current environmental stress, and (c) Climate, reef & proxy modelling – Climate & proxy advanced statistics. The strongly interdisciplinary Priority Programme will bring together expertise in the fields of climate, environmental and ecosytem research in a sustainable manner, and aims to provide an ultra-high resolution past to future perspective on current rates of change to project how tropical marine climate variability and coral reef ecosystems will change in a warming world.

How to cite: Felis, T. and Pfeiffer, M.: Tropical Climate Variability and Coral Reefs - A Past to Future Perspective on Current Rates of Change at Ultra-High Resolution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2353, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2353, 2021.

EGU21-10002 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Reduced El Niño variability in the PlioMIP2 model ensemble

Arthur Oldeman, Michiel Baatsen, Anna von der Heydt, Henk Dijkstra, and Julia Tindall

The mid-Piacenzian or mid-Pliocene warm period (mPWP, 3.264 – 3.025 Ma) is the most recent geological period to see atmospheric CO­2 levels similar to the present-day values (~400 ppm). Some proxy reconstructions for the mPWP show reduced zonal SST gradients in the tropical Pacific Ocean, possibly indicating an El Niño-like mean state in the mid-Pliocene. However, past modelling studies do not show the same results. Efforts to understand mPWP climate dynamics have led to the Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP). Results from the first phase (PlioMIP1) showed clear El Niño variability (albeit significantly reduced) and did not show the greatly reduced time-mean zonal SST gradient suggested by some of the proxies.

In this work, we study ENSO variability in the PlioMIP2 ensemble, which consists of additional global coupled climate models and updated boundary conditions compared to PlioMIP1. We quantify ENSO amplitude, period and spatial structure as well as the tropical Pacific annual mean state in a mid-Pliocene and pre-industrial reference simulation. Results show a reduced El Niño amplitude in the model- ensemble mean, with 11 out of 13 individual models showing such a reduction. Furthermore, the spectral power of this variability considerably decreases in the 3–7-year band and shifts to higher frequencies compared to pre-industrial. The spatial structure of the dominant EOF shows no particular change in the patterns of tropical Pacific variability in the model-ensemble mean, compared to the pre-industrial. Further analyses that will be presented include the correlation of the zonal SST gradient with the El Niño amplitude, investigation of shift in El Niño flavour, and a discussion of the coupled feedbacks at play in the mid-Pliocene tropical Pacific Ocean.

How to cite: Oldeman, A., Baatsen, M., von der Heydt, A., Dijkstra, H., and Tindall, J.: Reduced El Niño variability in the PlioMIP2 model ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10002, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10002, 2021.

EGU21-3395 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

How is the increase in the variability of ENSO events over the last 6000 years linked to the mean state change of the tropical Pacific Ocean ?

Isma Abdelkader Di Carlo, Pascale Braconnot, Olivier Marti, and Mary Elliot

El Niño events are the dominant mode of tropical interannual climate variability. This phenomenon, coupled with changes in atmospheric pressure related to the Southern Oscillation, modifies the distribution of surface water temperatures and weather conditions via atmospheric teleconnections. To better understand the linkages between changes in ENSO characteristics and changes in the Pacific ocean mean state, we use two transient simulations of the last 6000 years performed with the IPSL model that differ in resolution and presence (or not) of dynamical vegetation. The objective is to test several hypothesis raised in the literature on the role of the thermocline and the different factors constraining its changes with time.

This study will put an emphasis on the role of ocean dynamics. Several modelling studies indicate that an insolation-forced reduced equatorial upwelling feedback during the Mid-Holocene may be responsible for the less frequent ENSO events compared to modern. A few hypotheses have been made to explain this reduction in ENSO variability and equatorial upwelling feedback in the Mid-Holocene compared with today : subduction of warmer-than-normal South Pacific mode waters into the equatorial subsurface and tilt of the thermocline in the Warm Pool. Using specific diagnoses, we discuss the relative strength of different processes and highlight the differences between the processes explaining the long-term trend in variability and those characterising multidecadal to centennial variability.

How to cite: Abdelkader Di Carlo, I., Braconnot, P., Marti, O., and Elliot, M.: How is the increase in the variability of ENSO events over the last 6000 years linked to the mean state change of the tropical Pacific Ocean ?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3395, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3395, 2021.

EGU21-6931 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Opposing changes of ENSO-rainfall teleconnection over the Maritime Continent under global warming

Chen Chen, Sandeep Sahany, Aurel F. Moise, Xin Rong Chua, Muhammad E. Hassim, Gerald Lim, and Venkatraman Prasanna

Year-to-year variations of the Maritime Continent (MC, 80E-160E & 18S-26N) rainfall is strongly influenced by ENSO variability. Seasonal predictability of the MC rainfall heavily relies on climate models’ ability to simulate realistic ENSO developments and its teleconnection. Here we analyze 32 available state-of-the-art CMIP6 models, and find that most models are able to simulate the observed negative ENSO-rainfall teleconnection [i.e., drier than normal during El Niño and wetter than normal during La Niña] over the MC during the boreal winter (DJF, when ENSO normally peaks). Using the sign-adjusted bias analysis for the historical period [1980-2014], we show that CMIP6 models tend to systematically underestimate the negative correlation in the central MC and overestimate the positive correlation in the eastern MC due to the westward intrusion of the positive correlation within the tropical Pacific. In regard to changes in the ENSO-rainfall teleconnection over the MC under global warming, the multi-model mean suggests that, by the end of the 21st century [2065-2099] under the highest emission scenario (SSP585), the negative ENSO-rainfall teleconnection over the western and central MC will strengthen while the positive teleconnection over the eastern MC will weaken. These spatially opposing changes of ENSO teleconnection under global warming could induce dramatic multi-sectoral impacts within the MC.

How to cite: Chen, C., Sahany, S., Moise, A. F., Chua, X. R., Hassim, M. E., Lim, G., and Prasanna, V.: Opposing changes of ENSO-rainfall teleconnection over the Maritime Continent under global warming, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6931, 2021.

EGU21-8425 | vPICO presentations | CL2.13

Tropical rainfall linked to stronger future ENSO-NAO teleconnection in CMIP5 models

David Fereday, Rob Chadwick, Jeff Knight, and Adam Scaife

The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has previously been shown to influence the winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO).  In this presentation we investigate the ENSO-NAO teleconnection in historical and RCP8.5 scenario CMIP5 simulations, and show a future strengthening of the teleconnection under RCP8.5.  The teleconnection strength is associated with increased tropical east Pacific rainfall variability.  Stratospheric and tropospheric teleconnection pathways are examined, with both pathways having stronger links in future.  The stratospheric pathway involves the Aleutian Low and the stratospheric polar vortex, with a downward influence on the NAO.  This pathway is clearest in the high-top models that better resolve the stratosphere.  The tropospheric pathway is driven by the Pacific subtropical jet strengthening and extending further into the Atlantic in future, generating increased baroclinicity in the Caribbean and influencing the Atlantic storm track.  Our results suggest increasing influence of tropical rainfall on extratropical circulation in future.

How to cite: Fereday, D., Chadwick, R., Knight, J., and Scaife, A.: Tropical rainfall linked to stronger future ENSO-NAO teleconnection in CMIP5 models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8425, 2021.

CL2.16 – Impact of climate change on agriculture

EGU21-5261 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Impact of Climate Change on Apricot Yield in Turkey in the Near Future

M. Tufan Turp, Nazan An, Gökhan Özertan, and M. Levent Kurnaz

Apricot (Prunus armeniaca L.) is one of the most important export crops in Turkey and Turkey is the leader for both fresh and dried apricots production in the world. Apricot can be grown in all regions of Turkey with climate and vegetation diversities, except in the Eastern Black Sea Region and in the high plateaus of the East Anatolian Region. Malatya is the main producer province, which has good ecological and soil conditions in terms of apricot cultivation with the highest quality in Turkey. However, it is possible to talk about irregularities and decreases in apricot yield due to climate change in the region. Therefore, this study aims to observe climate change impacts on apricot yield in the main producer city, Malatya. Hereunder, climate projections were made at a 10 km horizontal resolution for the future period of 2021-2050 under the “worst-case” scenario (RCP8.5) using a regional climate model (RegCM4.4) for Malatya province considering 13 sub-regions. A statistical model, panel data method-multiple regression model, is designed to observe the effect of climate change and variability on the yield. Results indicate that adverse impacts of climate change on biological development of apricot lead to production irregularities and significant losses in yield in Malatya.

 

Acknowledgement: This research has been supported by Boğaziçi University Research Fund Grant Number 16763.

How to cite: Turp, M. T., An, N., Özertan, G., and Kurnaz, M. L.: Impact of Climate Change on Apricot Yield in Turkey in the Near Future, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5261, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5261, 2021.

EGU21-5382 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Assessment of Climate Suitability for Prunus armeniaca L. in Turkey in a Changing Climate

Nazan An, M. Tufan Turp, and M. Levent Kurnaz

Climate is a crucial factor for agricultural production and productivity. Foreseeing climate change in the future means predicting the possible effects on agriculture, and such studies observing year-dependent variability and predicting the effects of the near and mid-future climate change are valuable for both food security and economic value especially for countries which have commercial agricultural products like Turkey, as a Mediterranean Basin country with significant agricultural diversification. Apricot (Prunus armeniaca L.), which is one of Turkey's most important export products are expected to be affected significantly by climate change. Therefore, it is very important to see whether it will grow in the same regions in the future due to climatic changes for apricot. Hereunder, high resolution climate data, as an input for the membership function to be applied for classification of the climate suitability index, were obtained from RegCM4.4 under the RCP8.5 scenario for the period of 2021-2050 v.s. 1991-2018 for different phenological periods. Briefly, results indicate that adverse changes in climate suitability conditions for current apricot growing locations, 48 locations in the study, and the number of climate suitable locations for apricot will significantly decreases in the near and mid-future.  

 

 

Acknowledgement: This research has been supported by Bogazici University Research Fund Grant Number 17601.

How to cite: An, N., Turp, M. T., and Kurnaz, M. L.: Assessment of Climate Suitability for Prunus armeniaca L. in Turkey in a Changing Climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5382, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5382, 2021.

EGU21-9279 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Regularity of rainfall timing across Ethiopia: implications for crop production

Mosisa Wakjira, Darcy Molnar, Nadav Peleg, Johan Six, and Peter Molnar

Rainfall timing is a key parameter that farmers rely on to match the cropping season with the time window over which seasonal precipitation provides adequate soil moisture to meet plant growth demand. The unpredictability of rainfall timing affects the selection of an optimal growing season, and hence crop production in regions where rainfed agriculture (RFA) is practiced. In this study, we (a) map rainfall timing, and its interannual variability and changes over RFA areas across Ethiopia for the period 1981-2010, and (b) explore the impact of variability in rainfall timing on cereal crop production in the period 1995-2010.

For the mapping of rainfall timing, we used the quasi-global CHIRPS precipitation dataset over Ethiopia. We use information entropy on monthly rainfall to define the rainfall seasonality metrics, i.e. the relative entropy and dimensionless seasonality index, and map them in space. For rainfall timing attributes, we determine the onset, cessation, and length of the wet season from LOESS-smoothed cumulative pentad rainfall anomalies for each hydrological year. Changes in seasonality metrics and rainfall timing attributes are analyzed using non-parametric methods. We show that high seasonality (unimodal rainfall regime) is located in the northern part of the Ethiopian RFA area where high annual rainfall and high relative entropy are coincident, and where the onset of the rainfall season varies between mid-April to late-June and cessation occurs between mid-September to late-October. Low seasonality in the southern part of the Ethiopian RFA area shows low relative entropy regardless of the annual rainfall total. We observed a considerable interannual variability both in seasonality and rainfall timing over the study period, especially in the onset and length of the wet season. The length of the wet season and magnitude of seasonal rainfall are predominantly controlled by the timing of rainfall onset.

For the impacts of rainfall timing on crop production, we used cereal crop production data from the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia for the period 1995-2010 in 45 administrative zones. We carried out a parametric correlation analysis between rainfall timing and rescaled and de-trended crop production anomalies. We observe that anomalies in seasonal cereal crop production in RFA areas are significantly correlated with anomalies in rainfall onset (negatively) and the length of the wet season (positively), with a regional average production loss of 3% per pentad of late rainfall onset, and 2.7% per pentad of shorter length of the wet season. Seasonal rainfall is less strongly correlated with cereal crop production anomalies compared to the rainfall onset. These results show that the interannual variability in rainfall timing (start of the rainy season) even under present climate has strong impacts on crop yields in RFA areas in Ethiopia, and this may be exacerbated in a future climate.

How to cite: Wakjira, M., Molnar, D., Peleg, N., Six, J., and Molnar, P.: Regularity of rainfall timing across Ethiopia: implications for crop production, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9279, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9279, 2021.

EGU21-9554 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

The role of irrigation on potato yields in Northern Germany under climate change

Sabine Egerer, Andrea Fajardo, Michael Peichl, Oldrich Rakovec, Luis Samaniego, and Uwe Schneider

The agricultural sector is particularly vulnerable to changing weather and climate conditions. Climate projections for Germany until the end of this century demonstrate higher temperatures and a substantial net water deficit during the summer months when agriculture is in high demand for water. Additionally, the frequency and length of dry periods increase as a consequence of climate change. Irrigation was introduced in the 1960s in Northeast Lower Saxony (Germany) to become more resilient to changing weather and climate conditions and prevent yield losses. The region involves today the largest irrigated area in Germany. However, during the drought in 2018 water extractions for irrigation by far exceeded the institutional limit. Water using conflicts are likely to strengthen in the future as the irrigation demand will increase. In this study, we explore the importance of irrigation as a climate change adaptation measure in the region. First, we employ a statistical regression model to investigate whether regional climate, hydrological, and irrigation data on a monthly and county level scale are adequate to describe potato yield changes between 1978 and 2018. Soil moisture information originates from the mesoscale hydrologic model (mHM). Irrigation is estimated based on the climatic water balance and crop water demand. These estimations are scaled with irrigation data from local authorities to account for realistic monthly water withdrawals. Second, we use the process-based crop model EPIC to estimate potato crop yields and to validate the performance of the statistical approach. We analyze future yield changes based on climate model projections for the 21st century using the two approaches. We investigate different irrigation scenarios as a potential climate change adaptation measure. By comparing the statistical and process-based approaches we explore whether a rather simplistic statistical approach captures the main processes of the climate change impact on yields.

How to cite: Egerer, S., Fajardo, A., Peichl, M., Rakovec, O., Samaniego, L., and Schneider, U.: The role of irrigation on potato yields in Northern Germany under climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9554, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9554, 2021.

EGU21-9687 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Effects on irrigation patterns and management dates on silage corn and winter wheat yields in Northern Germany under climate change

Andrea Fajardo, Sabine Egerer, Luca Doro, Livia Rasche, and Uwe Schneider

Historically, there has not been major disputes over water rights between agriculture and domestic use in Northeastern Lower Saxony (NELS). In the 30-year mean from 1971 to 2000, the water balance national average was positive at 185 mm. According to the climate report for Lower Saxony, the water surplus will decrease by two-thirds for period 2070-2100 for RCP 8.5 scenario. NELS might be particularly vulnerable to more unstable precipitation patterns due to the sandy soil textures.

Frequency and intensity in drought events will intensify in the coming decades; irrigation investments might be the most promising option to attain stable yields for existing crops. Nevertheless, assessing feasible irrigation strategies requires consistent information on several crop processes and their impact by different weather conditions and irrigation strategies. EPIC crop model can generate data that allow testing of various irrigation options and their future implications. This offers an opportunity to save time resources, facilitating this way the decision-making processes.

In this study, we have simulated with EPIC crop model different irrigation levels changing application dates in regards to seasonal water deficit. The simulations use the crop rotation (potato – sugar beet – silage corn – soybean – winter wheat) under three RCPs scenarios (2.6, 4.5 and 8.5). With this research, we aim to advance the understanding of how irrigation influences soil quality and its contribution to the agriculture practices in Lower Saxony to emissions. Moreover, we investigated the effect of planting and harvesting dates on yield and soil quality.

How to cite: Fajardo, A., Egerer, S., Doro, L., Rasche, L., and Schneider, U.: Effects on irrigation patterns and management dates on silage corn and winter wheat yields in Northern Germany under climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9687, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9687, 2021.

EGU21-10850 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

The underlying mechanisms of post-drought yield outperformance in L. perenne

Marie-Louise Schärer, Andreas Lüscher, Lucia Fuchslueger, Andreas Richter, and Ansgar Kahmen

Introduction Reoccurring drought events can severely restrict forage production. However, experimentally drought stressed temperate forage grasslands have recently been reported to recover quickly after drought stress and re-wetting (DRW) and to be even more productive after drought than non-drought stressed control plots (Hofer et al., 2017; Hahn et al., in press). Although several studies show increased nutrient availability and microbial activity after DRW in grasslands (Bünemann et al., 2013; Sundert et al., 2020), an in-depth understanding if or how these mechanisms determine forage yield recovery is still missing.

Methods This study examined the effect of a 2-month experimental summer drought under different nitrogen (N) fertilizer applications on the recovery of high-input Lolium perenne swards after re-wetting. Yield performance, physiology, nutrient availability and soil microbial activity were assessed over 2 years during and after the drought treatment. In addition, a post-drought transplantation experiment of control and DRW soil and plants withdrawn from the field was conducted to disentangle plant physiological and soil nutrient cycling effects on yield recovery after drought.

Results Under all N applications, DRW outperformed the control yield in the field and showed higher N mineralization rates and higher soil N and K availabilities. Transplanted DRW plants showed longer but thinner leaves and decreased yields compared to control plants, irrespective of the soil’s DRW treatment. In contrast, DRW soils induced strongly increased L. perenne yields (on average +25%) compared to control soils. In summary, our data show that despite impaired plant growth after DRW, formerly drought stressed swards surpass control yields by profiting of higher mineralization rates and higher nutrient availability.

References

Bünemann EK, Keller B, Hoop D, Jud K, Boivin P, Frossard E (2013) Increased availability of phosphorus after drying and rewetting of a grassland soil: processes and plant use. Plant and Soil 370: 511–526

Hahn C, Lüscher A, Ernst-HaslerS, Suter M, Kahmen A (in press) Timing of drought in the growing season and strong legacy effects determine the annual productivity of temperate grasses in a changing climate. Biogeosciences.

Hofer D, Suter M, Buchmann N, Lüscher A (2017) Nitrogen status of functionally different forage species explains resistance to severe drought and post-drought overcompensation. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 236: 312–322

Sundert KV, Brune V, Bahn M, Deutschmann M, Hasibeder R, Nijs I, Vicca S (2020) Post-drought rewetting triggers substantial K release and shifts in leaf stoichiometry in managed and abandoned mountain grasslands. Plant Soil 448: 353–368

How to cite: Schärer, M.-L., Lüscher, A., Fuchslueger, L., Richter, A., and Kahmen, A.: The underlying mechanisms of post-drought yield outperformance in L. perenne, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10850, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10850, 2021.

EGU21-11565 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Impact of compound weather extremes on winter wheat in Germany

Florian Ellsäßer, Elena Xoplaki, Lorine Behr, Juerg Luterbacher, Andrea Toreti, and Matteo Zampieri

In the last decades, Europe has experienced an increase in the occurrence of extreme spring-to-summer heat and rainfall deficit. The compound impact of both hazardous weather events causes extreme drought conditions, which are likely to increase in frequency in the coming decades, with large impacts on agriculture and crop productivity. In this study, we analyze and attribute the effects of compound weather extremes on yield anomalies in Germany from 1989 to 2019.

To characterize the impact of compound events on irrigated and rainfed crops, statistical index-based approaches have widely been used, linking historic weather aggregates to yield records. To analyze and predict the impact of compound extreme events on crop yield, productivity and cultivation area at subnational level for Germany, we merged available yield data from multiple sources to create a consistent yield record of the last 30 years at county level. We then calculated indices on gridded meteorological data and records of phenological crop phases and agricultural practices, covering three decades, to analyze the effect of compound weather extremes on winter wheat yield.

We evaluated the SPEI (Standardized Precipitation Evaporation Index) for the 6-month period before winter wheat is harvested, to account for extremes in excess and lack of water availability. We further calculated the HMD (Heat Magnitude Day) index for the 3-month period before harvest, to assess the impact of heat stress conditions. Finally, a composite indicator the CSI (Combined Stress Index), based on a linear superposition of the standardized HMD and SPEI, is applied. The CSI is calibrated to local conditions by determination of coefficients that maximize the explanatory power of the index, using a bilinear ridge regression and county level yield observations.

The results of this study help to better understand the impacts of compound extremes on winter wheat in Germany and reveal regions that are especially threatened by yield losses from compound weather extremes.

How to cite: Ellsäßer, F., Xoplaki, E., Behr, L., Luterbacher, J., Toreti, A., and Zampieri, M.: Impact of compound weather extremes on winter wheat in Germany, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11565, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11565, 2021.

EGU21-12965 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

The impacts of hot-dry compound extremes on US Soybean yields

Raed Hamed, Anne Van Loon, Jeroen Aerts, and Dim Coumou

The US agriculture system supplies more than one third of globally traded soybean, of which 90% is produced under rainfed agriculture. This makes the commodity particularly sensitive to weather and climate variability. Previous research has shown that annually averaged climate conditions explain about a third of global crop yield variability. Additionally, although less studied so far, crops are sensitive to specific short-term weather conditions, isolated or co-occurring at key moments throughout the growing season. Here we aim to identify key within-season weather and climate variables that can explain soybean yield variability in the US while exploring synergies between drivers that can have compounding impacts. The study combines weather data from reanalysis and satellite-based evapotranspiration and root-zone soil moisture with sub-national crop yield estimates using statistical methods that account for interaction effects. We also analyze the historic changes in identified key driving conditions in order to explore the effects of current climatic trends on yields. Our preliminary results indicate positive yield response to higher minimum temperature early and late in the season whereas the largest effect on soybeans is driven by the harmful co-occurrence of high temperature and low moisture levels during the summer flowering period significantly reducing yields on average in the US  by one standard deviation. The magnitude of the response to climate drivers varies across the spatial domain highlighting the need to focus on local and season specific management strategies. On the bright side, recent trends in temperature have not increased the likelihood of low yields. This is because the overall warming conditions reduce the risk of frost early and late in the season. Conversely, a peculiar cooling trend during the summer period attributed to agricultural land use is beneficial for yields when crops are most sensitive to high temperatures. Our study provides a detailed understanding of the current relationship between climate and soybean yields in the US. This is particularly relevant for adaptation and mitigation strategies aimed at avoiding low yields in a context of increasing food demand and climate change.

How to cite: Hamed, R., Van Loon, A., Aerts, J., and Coumou, D.: The impacts of hot-dry compound extremes on US Soybean yields, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12965, 2021.

EGU21-12973 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Geoinformation in support of sustainable soils’ management to strengthen resilience under the pressure of climate change

Christina Lekka, George P. Petropoulos, Dimitrios Triantakonstantis, Spyros Detsikas, and Christos Chalkias

Abstract

The National Map of Saline – Alkaline Soils of Greece was recently developed within the initiative of the European Soil Partnership (ESP) of FAO. The technique combines between other MODIS satellite imagery, spatial interpolation methods and ground surveying to derive at 1 km spatial resolution maps of soil’s salinity (SS) and soil organic carbon (SOC).

The present study investigates for the first time the development of higher resolution maps of these soil properties adopting the aforementioned methodology. Furthermore, this study attempted to estimate the Carbon sequestration (SOC) using Remote Sensing and geostatistic methods of spatial analysis, a concern that is eminent today due to its effect on climate change mitigation.

As a case study the island of Mytilene in Greece is used, for which detailed information on soil properties as well as climatic, geomorphological, geological and soil data was available from previous studies. An MCDA (Multiple Criteria Decision Analysis) method was applied in a GIS environment using Landsat satellite imagery for the composition of a Saline - Alkaline map. Between the key soil parameters estimated spatially included the Electrical Conductivity (EC), Exchangeable Sodium Percentage (ESP) and pH. Geospatial data analysis methods were implemented to visualize all the derived parameters related for the study area and to analyze the final products in the spatial domain.

Finding suggests that climate change and soil directly affect one another. The impact of environmental and climate change in addition to unsustainable agricultural practices seems to be linked to salinity increase, soil erosion and loss of organic matter.  In addition, when land degradation as well as erosion and loss of vegetation occur, SOC emissions increase. Under these conditions, soil cannot absorb enough amounts of CO2, especially when soil salinization and sodicity exists; inputs are further limited due to declines in vegetation health. The role of geoinformation technologies in support of sustainable agricultural production under the pressure of both climate change and anthropogenic activities is also discussed within the present study framework.  

KEYWORDS: geoinformation, soil, pH, salinity, soil organic carbon, geostatistics, earth observation, GIS, Greece

How to cite: Lekka, C., Petropoulos, G. P., Triantakonstantis, D., Detsikas, S., and Chalkias, C.: Geoinformation in support of sustainable soils’ management to strengthen resilience under the pressure of climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12973, 2021.

EGU21-13211 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Greek National Map of Soil Organic Carbon

Dimitris Triantakonstantis and Spyros Detsikas

Soil organic carbon (SOC) is the carbon that remains in the soil after the partial decomposition of any material produced by living organisms. It is an essential parameter for agricultural production, the potential sequestration of CO₂ in soil and a vital soil function for global carbon cycle. However, a vast potential of soil carbon is removed from agricultural soils due to non-sustainable soil management practices. Mapping SOC and its changes over time and space is highly valuable for estimating the CO₂ emissions and effects of climate change to the environment. In the present work, the Greek National Map of SOC is presented calculating the SOC stock in 30 arc-seconds spatial resolution using the Global Soil Partnership and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) guidelines for SOC mapping. The presented methodology considers the reference framework of the SCORPAN model for digital soil mapping, which can predict SOC stocks in correspondence with soil forming factors. Among the key variables used for estimating SOC stocks are environmental covariates such as climate and meteorological data, thematic maps, digital terrain data, geomorphometry and soil data. Data mining and geostatistical techniques (random forests, support vector machines, regression-kriging) are used to estimate the SOC stocks. Internal and external map accuracy is used to evaluate the performance of the Greek National SOC map. Accuracy of FAO’s methodology was examined herein using different modelling approaches. As indicated in the results, the most accurate map was produced by the random forest technique and an accuracy of FAC2=0.968, RMSE=0.322 and r=0.756. The main findings are also discussed herein covering aspects relevant to the method implementation, validation and feasibility of operational implementation.

Keywords: soil organic carbon, climate change, soil management practices, Greek National Map

How to cite: Triantakonstantis, D. and Detsikas, S.: Greek National Map of Soil Organic Carbon, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13211, 2021.

EGU21-14408 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Simulation-based indices for a climate-resilient agriculture - insights from ADAPTER

Sebastian Bathiany, Diana Rechid, Susanne Pfeifer, Juliane El Zohbi, Klaus Goergen, Niklas Wagner, Patrizia Ney, and Alexandre Belleflamme

Agriculture is among the sectors that are most vulnerable to extreme weather conditions and climate change. In Germany, the subsequent dry and hot summers 2018, 2019, and 2020 have brought this into the focus of public attention. Agricultural actors like farmers, advisors or companies are concerned with such interannual variability and extremes. Yet, it often remains unclear what long-term adaptation options are most suitable in the context of climate change, mainly because climate projections have uncertainties and are usually not tailored to meet requirements, measures and scales of the individual practicioners. In the ADAPTER project, we explore regional and local change on the weather- and climate-related time scales and together with stakeholders (administration, plant breeders, educators, agricultural advisors), we co-design tailored climate change indices and usable products.

In this contribution, we provide a snapshot view of our stakeholders' requirements regarding information about climate change over the next decades. We then focus on the analysis of three groups of indices based on 85 regional climate model simulations from Coordinated Downscaling Experiments over Europe - EURO-CORDEX: (i) changes in daily temperature variability, (ii) occurrence of agricultural droughts in summer, (iii) compound events of combined dryness and elevated temperatures during the same events. We show that these user-oriented, newly constructed indices can capture relevant changes during important phenological development states of typical crops. Finally, we discuss first implications of our findings for different adaptation strategies in Mid-Europe, such as alternating crop rotations, irrigation strategies or plant breeding. The analysis products presented are interactively and publicly available through a product platform (www.adapter-projekt.de) for agricultural stakeholders.

How to cite: Bathiany, S., Rechid, D., Pfeifer, S., El Zohbi, J., Goergen, K., Wagner, N., Ney, P., and Belleflamme, A.: Simulation-based indices for a climate-resilient agriculture - insights from ADAPTER, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14408, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14408, 2021.

This research proposal aims to contribute to the body of knowledge about smallholder farmers’ anthropogenic climate change perceptions, and how said perceptions shape adaptability and resilience, resulting in adopting new and old strategies grounded in local knowledge. 86% of farms in Indonesia are owned and cultivated by smallholders. This group is among the poorest and most vulnerable in Indonesia while contributing the most considerable part to the available food production in the entire country. Smallholder farmers from Lombok are, in particular, among the most vulnerable due to their socio-economic status and the high exposure of the region to climate-related hazards. The group’s perceptions and discourse of anthropogenic change are shaped by local knowledge and the social environment, and top-down initiatives from the government and NGOs. The interplay of both factors has yet to be researched. This research is ethnographic and qualitative and will be conducted during three field-site visits of 6 months each. In apprentice anthropology, the notion that the farmer is the expert on local knowledge and new strategies as a means to adapt will be included wherein the researcher is the student and the respondent the teacher. The choice for this type of methodology is made because the majority of research on the intersection of agriculture, climate change, and social science is quantitative and does not consider local farmers as experts in their own field. Therefore, participant observation, semi-structured interviews, document analysis, and group discussions will be used.

How to cite: Koopman, J.: Small farmers, large issues: discourse, local knowledge, and strategies, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14618, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14618, 2021.

EGU21-14905 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

The agricultural pressure cooker: how climate, demography, and value chain megatrends affect European rural regions

Niels Debonne

EGU21-14990 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Climate change impacts on irrigation water resource in Switzerland

Zoe Linder, Annelie Holzkämper, and Massimiliano Zappa

According to climate projections, rainfall rates and summer discharge from snow and glacier melt in Switzerland are expected to decrease by the end of the 21st century. This may lead to limited water availability for irrigation in agriculture in the future and high irrigation water demand especially during the summer months, which consequently enhances the problem of water scarcity for agriculture.

These predicted changes make the identification of timescales, frequencies, and geographical pattern of water scarcity a fundamental concern for future agricultural practices. Therefore, the main aim of this work is to investigate climate change impacts on water resources and the consequences on irrigation water supply in Switzerland. By creating maps of the geographic distribution of natural water resources available according to climate projections until the end of the 21st century using ArcGIS, the severity of water scarcity is quantified, while regional differences and the most affected areas can be revealed.

The expected outcomes are increasing days of water scarcity per year over the course of the 21st century, while those regions furthest away from melt water sources and lakes will be most affected. This in turn might lead to restricted irrigation potential, making more efficient water use indispensable in Switzerland, while creating general shifts to more water-resistant crops in Swiss agricultural practices.

How to cite: Linder, Z., Holzkämper, A., and Zappa, M.: Climate change impacts on irrigation water resource in Switzerland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14990, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14990, 2021.

EGU21-15698 | vPICO presentations | CL2.16

Spatio-temporal variability of global crop water requirement, during 1950-2020

Matteo Rolle, Stefania Tamea, and Pierluigi Claps

Intensification of studies of the agricultural water requirement is a main challenge in a globalized world, where food production is pushed to meet the needs of a growing population and the international trade network requires large-scale planning policies. Agriculture is the human activity that consumes most of the withdrawn freshwater and climate change can greatly influence the amount of irrigation required by crops. In recent years, the widespread availability of satellite images is providing an important contribution to water resources management, offering data at high spatio-temporal resolution over an interestingly long period of time.

This study deals with the temporal variability of global water requirement of the main crops, which is assessed through a comprehensive model, driven by climate forcings, that estimates the daily crop water requirement on a spatial resolution of 5 arc-min (or 0.0833°) from 1950 to 2020. The model computes a soil water balance using daily input data of precipitation and evapotranspiration, based on the high-resolution ERA5 reanalysis dataset from the Climate Change Service of the Copernicus Program, which combines satellite information and ground measurements. The distribution of harvested areas and the length of crop development phases are kept constant, to analyze the variability of crop water requirement strictly related to climate forcings, both in terms of precipitation (green water) and irrigation (blue water). The model considers the separation between irrigated and rainfed areas, in order to provide a consistent spatial distribution of irrigation requirements. Examining the spatio-temporal variability of the crop water requirement can support considerations on the effects of global warming in different areas in the world.

How to cite: Rolle, M., Tamea, S., and Claps, P.: Spatio-temporal variability of global crop water requirement, during 1950-2020, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15698, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15698, 2021.

CL2.17 – Building operational weather and climate services for sustainable development in the global South

EGU21-74 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17 | Highlight

2020 State of Climate Services report: Risk Information and Early Warning Systems

Veronica Grasso

Between 1970 and 2019, 79% of disasters worldwide involved weather, water, and climate-related hazards. These disasters accounted for 56% of deaths and 75% of economic losses from disasters associated with natural hazards reported during that period. As climate change continues to threaten human lives, ecosystems and economies, risk information and early warning systems (EWS) are increasingly seen as key for reducing these impacts. The majority of countries, including 88% of least developed countries and small island states, that submitted their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) to UNFCCC have identified EWS as a “top priority”.

This latest multi-agency report, coordinated by WMO, highlights progress made in EWS capacity – and identifies where and how governments can invest in effective EWS to strengthen countries’ resilience to multiple weather, water and climate-related hazards. Being prepared and able to react at the right time, in the right place, can save many lives and protect the livelihoods of communities everywhere.

How to cite: Grasso, V.: 2020 State of Climate Services report: Risk Information and Early Warning Systems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-74, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-74, 2021.

EGU21-39 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

ENACTS: Transforming Climate Services Across Africa

Tufa Dinku

Despite recent and mostly global efforts to promote climate services in developing countries, Africa still faces significant limitations in its institutional infrastructure and capacity to develop, access, and use decision-relevant climate data and information products at multiple levels of governance. The Enhancing National Climate Services (ENACTS) initiative, led by Columbia University’s International Research Institute for Climate and Society, strives to overcome these challenges by targeting the way climate-sensitive decisions are made at the local, regional, and national levels. The ENACTS approach is executed by working directly with the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHS) to build capacity for improving the availability, access, and use of quality climate data and information products at relevant spatial and temporal scales. The ENACTS approach has shown to be an effective means to transform decision-making surrounding vulnerabilities and risks at both national and local scales in over a dozen countries at the national level as well as at regional level East and West Africa. In the ENACTS approach, challenges to the availability of climate data are alleviated by combining quality-controlled station observations with global proxies to generate spatially and temporally complete climate datasets. Access to climate information is enhanced by developing an online mapping service that provides a user-friendly interface for analyzing and visualizing climate information products. Use of the generated climate data and the derived information products are promoted through raising awareness in relevant communities, training users, and co-production processes.

How to cite: Dinku, T.: ENACTS: Transforming Climate Services Across Africa, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-39, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-39, 2021.

EGU21-7029 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Regional climate projections and associated climate services in the southwest Indian ocean basin

Marie Dominique Leroux, François Bonnardot, Stephason Kotomangazafy, Philippe Veerabadren, Abdoul Oikil Ridhoine, Samuel Somot, Antoinette Alias, and Fabrice Chauvin

In the former Cordex program, regional climate models were run over Africa and only covered the western part of the South Indian Ocean at a coarse 50-km resolution while a 12-km resolution was used for Europe. A 50-km resolution is insufficient for island territories as small and steep as those in the Indian Ocean. Yet this area is especially vulnerable to natural catastrophes related to the effects of climate change: it is the third region in the world most affected by extreme climatic events. The need for climate services over that populated area has now become a critical issue.

Both dynamical and statistical downscaling from a few ongoing CMIP6 simulations were therefore used to obtain regional climate information on a large area of the southwest Indian Ocean that includes most of the inhabited countries from the coasts of Mozambique (33°E) to 74°E as well as the main area of tropical cyclone genesis [2-28°S]. The limited area model ALADIN was implemented in its climate version at 12-km resolution and the first runs were coupled by outputs from one of the CMIP6 Earth Simulation Coupled Models named CNRM-ESM2-1.

We will present the numerical and statistical tools used for this regional climate study as well as the first projections obtained for ssp126 (RCP2.6), ssp245 (RCP4,5) and ssp585 (RCP8.5) scenarios over the 2015-2100 period. Results will be illustrated for the southwest Indian ocean basin as well as for the main islands of the IOC member countries: Madagascar, Reunion, Mauritius, Seychelles, and Comoros where observations over the 1981-2010 period were used for model bias correction using the quantile-quantile matching method. For climate uncertainty representativeness, the 2015-2100 evolution of both ALADIN and CNRM-ESM2-1 temperature and precipitation averages over our region will be compared to that of the other available CMIP6 simulations.

This work is part of the BRIO (Building Resilience in the Indian Ocean) project which aims at supporting the Indian Ocean Commission (IOC) member countries in the implementation of their adaptation policies with respect to climate change (regarding water resources, health and other issues). This project will provide a set of high quality climate-related data on a free-access online regional portal as well as climate services. It is funded by the Agence Française de Développement (AFD), through the Adapt’Action Facility, in cooperation with the IOC.

 

How to cite: Leroux, M. D., Bonnardot, F., Kotomangazafy, S., Veerabadren, P., Ridhoine, A. O., Somot, S., Alias, A., and Chauvin, F.: Regional climate projections and associated climate services in the southwest Indian ocean basin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7029, 2021.

EGU21-5319 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Modelling the Southeast African regional Climate

Rasmus Benestad, Bernardino Nhantumbo, Ayabagabo Prosper, Joseph Ndakize Sebaziga, Aminadab Tuyisenge, Charles Vanya, Berny Chaimite, and Mary-Jane Bopape

The aim of the Flagship Pilot Study (FPS) “Modelling the Southeast African regional Climate” is to study processes and phenomena relevant to regional climate change in south-eastern Africa. The region is vulnerable to climate change due to socio-economic factors as well as its exposure to weather and climate extremes such as floods, droughts and heat waves. The FPS will foster regional collaboration on modelling and the analysis of precipitation and temperature that will be beneficial for the society in general. The FPS South-eastern Africa includes various scientists from the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services (NMHSs) and academia of South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda, Burundi and Norway. The research will involve analysis of local observations, reanalysis, simulations from regional climate models (RCMs) and empirical-statistical downscaling (ESD) to study dependencies between large-scale conditions and local variability in the rain and temperature statistics. The expected impacts of the FPS are skills development in data analysis and modelling, and a better understanding of regional climate that is fundamental to climate services and provides guidance to decision-makers and planners. The involvement of NMHS in the project provides access to their observational networks, whose use will assist with verification of model simulations, and also increase the value of NMHSs’ work with observations and data management. Actionable information will be extracted for decision-makers, based on a synthesis of multiple sources of information which take into account the local climate, past and future trends, models’ skill, known weather/climatological phenomena, and other geographical information. Biases between the model climate and observations will be adjusted through appropriate adjustment methods such as the Quantile Mapping approach. The work will also involve capacity building on R programming language as well as other tools (e.g. CDO, python) and use R-based shiny web applications in distillation efforts and to provide a gateway to the information embedded in complex data structures.

How to cite: Benestad, R., Nhantumbo, B., Prosper, A., Ndakize Sebaziga, J., Tuyisenge, A., Vanya, C., Chaimite, B., and Bopape, M.-J.: Modelling the Southeast African regional Climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5319, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5319, 2021.

EGU21-3027 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Toward operational flood forecasting and warning services across West Africa – recent experiences at national and regional scales

Jafet Andersson, Mohammed Hamatan, Martijn Kuller, and Addi Shuaib

Flooding is a rapidly growing concern in West Africa. In 2020 alone, several hundred people died and 100 000 were displaced by the floods that occurred across the region. The floods damaged houses and crops and washed away livestock, threatening the livelihoods of millions. Niamey, the capital of Niger, experienced a record flood with the highest ever recorded water levels in nearly 100 years. Flooding is also projected to increase with climate change. One component in addressing this challenge – and a concrete way to adapt to the changing climate – is to provide operational forecasting and warning services to enable pre-emptive stakeholder action and thereby minimize damages.

Since 2018, a pre-operational flood forecasting and warning service for West Africa has been co-designed, co-developed, co-adapted, and co-operated within the FANFAR project (https://fanfar.eu/, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-7660). This study presents results from two approaches employed to assess the accuracy and utility of the service.

Firstly, representatives from hydrological services, emergency management agencies, river basin organisations, and regional expert centres in 17 countries have contributed to develop and evaluate the service. Specifically, each participating organisation was asked to test the service during the 2019 and 2020 rainy seasons, to record the most critical flood events and the extent to which FANFAR captured the location, timing, magnitude and severity of the floods. The results indicate that both the use and accuracy of the service varies substantially (e.g. from 90% correct in some countries to not even used in others). This people-centred assessment approach also provided an important opportunity to learn about the many events that occur outside of hydrometric monitoring networks, and the way in which agencies communicate flood risk information to multiple audiences for appropriate decision-making.

Secondly, we evaluated FANFAR forecasts against conventional gauge observations at key locations (e.g. Niamey). The effect of different system configurations on forecast performance was assessed (e.g. the benefit of model calibration and assimilation of gauge observations). The results likewise indicate a performance spread, and sometimes ability to capture certain features of a flood but not all. For example, for the record flood in Niamey in 2020, FANFAR managed to forecast the timing and severity level at the onset of the flood, but not the extent or long duration of the flood.

We finish off by reflecting on some challenges and opportunities for operational, scalable and reliable 24/7 weather and climate services in West Africa, with potential applicability in the global South.

How to cite: Andersson, J., Hamatan, M., Kuller, M., and Shuaib, A.: Toward operational flood forecasting and warning services across West Africa – recent experiences at national and regional scales, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3027, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3027, 2021.

EGU21-4594 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Forecasting annual maximum water level for Negro River at Manaus

Amulya Chevuturi, Nicholas P. Klingaman, Steven J. Woolnough, Conrado M. Rudorff, Caio A. S. Coelho, and Jochen Schongart

Variations in water levels of the Negro River, that flows through the Port of Manaus, can cause considerable regional environmental and socio-economic losses. It is therefore critical to advance predictions for water levels, especially flood levels, to provide more effective and earlier warnings to safeguard lives and livelihoods. Variations in water levels in free-flowing river systems, like the Negro follow large-scale precipitation anomalies, which offers an opportunity to predict maximum water levels using observed antecedent rainfall. This study aims to improve the performance and extend the lead time of statistical forecasts for annual maximum water level of the Negro River at Manaus, relative to operational forecasts. Multiple linear regression methods are applied to develop forecast models, that can be issued in March, February and January, with the best possible combinations potential predictors: observed antecedent catchment rainfall and water levels, large-scale modes of climate variability and the linear trend in water levels. Our statistical models gain one month of lead time against existing models, but are only moderately better than existing models at similar lead time. Using European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) seasonal reforecast data with our statistical models, further gains an additional month of lead time of skilful performance. Our models lose performance at longer lead times, as expected. Our forecast models can issue skilful operational forecasts in March or earlier and have been successfully tested for operational forecast of 2020. This method can be applied to develop statistical models for annual maximum water level over other free-flowing rivers in the Amazon basin with intact catchments and historical water level record.

How to cite: Chevuturi, A., Klingaman, N. P., Woolnough, S. J., Rudorff, C. M., Coelho, C. A. S., and Schongart, J.: Forecasting annual maximum water level for Negro River at Manaus, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4594, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4594, 2021.

EGU21-12468 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

4onse project results: quality and costs evaluation of an open and low-cost monitoring network of 30 stations in Sri Lanka

Daniele Strigaro, Massimiliano Cannata, Rangajeewa Ratnayake, Bh Sudantha, and Imran Sahid

The 4onse project (Four times Open Non-conventional system for Sensing the Environment) was born by the collaboration between SUPSI and two universities in developing countries namely the University of Moratuwa in Sri Lanka and the Institue of Space Technologies in Pakistan. The activities led to the installation of more than 30 stations in the Deduru Oya basin in Sri Lanka, following the development and testing of a prototype. The rise of technologies for Smart City and the Internet of Things (IoT) makes this project of interest to both the scientific and the private world, also considering the growing concern for environmental and climate issues.

The environmental monitoring system has been designed and developed on the wave of openness, which increasingly pervades not only scientific activity, but also the commercial sectors at different levels. Based on this philosophy, the selected hardware and software technologies have been evaluated in terms of quality, durability and sustainability and are showing very promising results. Unlike conventional systems, where the adoption of closed solutions strongly limits interoperability and data sharing, the designed solution is characterized by a high reproducibility and interoperability, guaranteed by the adoption of open software and standards for the collection and distribution of data. Such a technology can be applied and further developed for monitoring natural and non-natural environments that require low-cost sensor components with a level of quality comparable to conventional systems commonly used. This cost-effective solution is a possible alternative for the implementation of sensor networks in particular in low-income or developing countries in order to manage natural risks or water resources.

The solution consists of three different layers: hardware, server and communication layer. The hardware layer consists of a weather station based on Arduino and sensors measuring environmental variables. This kind of prototype has been validated thanks to the comparison of the time series with the data of an official weather station of the hydro-meteorological network of the Canton Ticino. The second layer is characterized by the server infrastructure that stores the measured data using the istSOS database management system (DBMS), which makes them accessible thanks to the implementation of open standards such as the Sensor Observation Service (SOS) of the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC). Finally, the communication layer concerns the use of GPRS for the transmission of data from the node to the server that has been optimized in terms of energy and bandwidth consumption in order to guarantee stable and fast communication.

The research project has reached the end of the activities and during this presentation the main results and outputs will be presented.

How to cite: Strigaro, D., Cannata, M., Ratnayake, R., Sudantha, B., and Sahid, I.: 4onse project results: quality and costs evaluation of an open and low-cost monitoring network of 30 stations in Sri Lanka, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12468, 2021.

EGU21-15715 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

From global forecasts towards regional decision support: development of a full-fledged seasonal forecasting framework for semi-arid regions

Christof Lorenz, Tanja Portele, Thomas Kukuk, and Harald Kunstmann

Seasonal hydrometeorological forecasts have the potential to significantly improve the regional water management, disaster preparedness and climate proofing, particularly in water-scarce regions. They also allow for the development of forecast-based action plans for extreme climatic events like droughts and anomalous wet conditions. However, raw global products from data providers like the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) cannot be directly used for regional applications due to model biases and drifts as well as a coarse spatial resolution of 35km and more. Furthermore, for transferring the information from ensemble-based forecasts into practice, we have to provide derived and tailormade forecast quantities for the water management in a user-friendly way. In this study, we hence present an operational post-processing and online decision support system with which we a) regionalize ECMWF’s latest seasonal forecast system SEAS5 through a Bias-Correction and Spatial Disaggregation (BCSD) technique, b) compute tailored forecast measures like categorical forecast and drought indicators and c) visualize this information through an online platform. As reference, we are using the offline re-run of ERA5’s land surface component, namely ERA5-Land. Our final forecast product comprises daily ensemble forecasts for precipitation, temperature, and radiation, has a spatial resolution of 0.1°, covers the whole period from 1981 to the present and is provided for several climate-sensitive river-basins including the Rio São Francisco (Brazil), the Blue Nile (Sudan / Ethiopia) and the Karun (Iran). Derived forecast quantities are operationally computed and visualized through an online decision support system, that was jointly developed with water experts from the different study regions. As both the forecast repository and the online decision support system are publicly available, they provide a comprehensive framework for demonstrating how seasonal forecasts can be post-processed and tailored for the day-to-day water management. They further allow for the training and education of local stakeholders and water experts how to deal with seasonal forecasts. Our forecasting system is already used by several authorities and weather services in Iran, Sudan and Brazil. It thereby constitutes a large step towards an improved disaster preparedness and, hence, the climate proofing of the water sector particularly in these semi-arid regions.

How to cite: Lorenz, C., Portele, T., Kukuk, T., and Kunstmann, H.: From global forecasts towards regional decision support: development of a full-fledged seasonal forecasting framework for semi-arid regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15715, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15715, 2021.

EGU21-7266 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Forecast-based approach for flood in Mali: a prototype of a climate service

Cheikh Kane, Bachir Alkali Tanimoun, N'dji dit Jacques Dembélé, Abdouramane Gado Djibo, Mohamed Koité, Cheick Fanta Mady Koné, Andrew Kruczkiewicz, Nouhoum Maïga, Sidiky Sangaré, and Moussa Touré

The rainfall regime in the Sahel region in West Africa shows a rise in the extreme rainfall occurrence. During the 2020 rainy season, floods and inundations of unprecedented magnitude have struck almost all the Sahelian countries. Despite this new trend, the local disaster management community still reacts on a response mode, based on an annually updated flood contingency plan. In this work we present the process followed to set-up an Early Action Protocol for riverine flood. Novelty and specificity of this climate service and its co-production process lies in the fact that it's not led by the climate national information providers (meteorological and hydrological agencies), but rather proposed by a user, namely Mali Red Cross Society, with the support of its partners across The Red Cross movement. Working groups (WGs) were established to co-produce the following: participatory mapping of past flood extent linked to historical river flows and vulnerability and exposure analysis for different areas, around the 2 major rivers Niger and Senegal and their tributaries; an impact-based trigger model, taking into account, on a 5 year return period basis, the available river flow monitoring historical analysis of river peaks at the main hydrological stations, the expected impact level, the derived exposure map and vulnerability index; coordination and selection of early actions and intervention map, based on priority impacts, people targeting and feasibility of actions was led by MRCS and its Red Cross partners. After reviewing available tools and capacities, the decision was made to prioritize riverine floods around the two main river basins of Niger and Senegal. In absence of suitable hydrological forecasting models, the agreement was to use the weekly monitoring of river flows and levels by the department of hydrology, combined with rainfall forecast from the Met agency. Water levels corresponding to the 5 years return periods were selected with a lead-time for action of 4 days. The civil protection directorate provided historical flood impacts. In addition, for the city of Bamako, the following actions were undertaken: geomorphometric analysis from radar and satellite imagery; participatory mapping of flooded areas and analysis of the drainage network collectors, with a focus on the state of gutter blockage; analysis of the duration of the rising water after the start of the rain and the duration of water stagnation. The work undertaken by the WGs led to critical data production needed to develop the trigger mechanism for extreme stream flows, and associated impacts, for the noted rivers, inter alia: identification of areas and households exposed to risk; determination of the thresholds required per village/commune to trigger the emergency alert; identification of upstream mitigation activities at the household level, identification of potential partners in coverage areas where cooperation and/or complementarity is needed; enhanced monitoring of the announced flood through the scientific tools available on a weekly and daily basis. The output of this work is intended to inform discussions in the region and in other regions related to sustainable and appropriate locally led co-development of anticipatory action mechanisms.

How to cite: Kane, C., Alkali Tanimoun, B., Dembélé, N. D. J., Gado Djibo, A., Koité, M., Koné, C. F. M., Kruczkiewicz, A., Maïga, N., Sangaré, S., and Touré, M.: Forecast-based approach for flood in Mali: a prototype of a climate service, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7266, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7266, 2021.

EGU21-12628 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Perceptions of Climate Information in the Caribbean: Implications for Adaptation

Denyse Dookie, Declan Conway, and Suraje Dessai

Despite an increasing recognition of the value of climate information and broader weather and climate services (WCS) for decision-making, understanding its wider dimensions for effective delivery and use remains an ongoing discussion. In particular, a focus on barriers and enablers of using climate information can be helpful for policy-directed efforts, as this underscores challenges and streamlines strategies for action. For smaller and developing countries with particular vulnerabilities to climate variability and change, and various barriers to climate information/WCS uptake, this is especially true but often limited within research. This paper addresses this research gap by offering perceptions of climate information use in the insular Caribbean. We engaged with 26 potential WCS end-users in the form of region-wide experts and decision-makers who focus on climate adaptation, disaster risk reduction, and resilience, and analysed semi-structured interview responses to understand barriers and enablers of WCS delivery and use within the region. Against a history of projectised adaptation initiatives in the Caribbean, the results highlight that while finance is critical, there is rather a range of interlinked enabling conditions necessary for the effective use of climate information. Caribbean respondents stressed the need for island-contextualised climate information and the importance of adequate human resource capacity, loud voices/climate champions, and effective political and legislative mandates for understanding and using climate information for climate-related decision-making. As well, a factor visualisation illustrates that the practical awareness of climate information for decision-making is closely tied to proactive climate champions, and that available finance should be noted within the context of donor interests. Moving ahead, it is clear that an integrated approach for effective WCS delivery and use is necessary, requiring engaged WCS partnerships amongst multiple stakeholders. The highlighting of such challenges within an under-researched area such as the Caribbean provides insights for developing adaptation strategies within the region, and can also signal critical elements relevant for other small developing countries.

How to cite: Dookie, D., Conway, D., and Dessai, S.: Perceptions of Climate Information in the Caribbean: Implications for Adaptation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12628, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12628, 2021.

EGU21-7324 | vPICO presentations | CL2.17

Virtual user engagement methods for working with stakeholders in China 

Rosie Oakes, Stacey New, Jennifer Weeks, Nicola Golding, Chris Hewitt, and Tyrone Dunbar
 

Climate services provide information to help better manage climate-related risks and opportunities in different sectors around the world. This requires work at the interface between scientific research and decision-making. Studies have found that climate services are most effective when they are co-developed and co-produced with the intended users of the services. To achieve this, climate service developments often involve scientists engaging with users and potential users, which traditionally has been most productive face-to-face, at least in the early stages of engagement and co-development to build relationships.  

In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic dramatically restricted face-to-face engagement, particularly for international activities. Climate service providers and users had to suddenly adapt and find methods to engage with each other virtually. Here we discuss the software and methods that are being used to ensure that provider-user engagement could continue, despite international travel restrictions, with a specific focus on working with users in China as part of the Climate Science for Services Partnership China project; a collaboration between the UK Met Office and other UK partners, the China Meteorological Administration, and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics. Using examples from work on food security with the agriculture sector in Northeast China, we will showcase different climate service prototype products, such as brochures, information packs, and comic book storylines which are helping us to engage with and understand the requirements of multiple audiences despite the lack of in-person engagement.  

Through this work, we have discovered additional benefits to virtual engagement, such as more frequent interactions with users, the ability to involve participants who wouldn’t usually be able to travel to attend events, and new metrics for evaluating climate services. These benefits will likely make virtual provider-user engagement a more common tool for developing and refining climate services with international partners in the future. We hope that the tools and methods presented here will help other climate service providers to conduct productive virtual provider-user engagement in the future, both in China and in other countries around the world. 

How to cite: Oakes, R., New, S., Weeks, J., Golding, N., Hewitt, C., and Dunbar, T.: Virtual user engagement methods for working with stakeholders in China , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7324, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7324, 2021.

CL3.1.1 – Regional Climate Modeling, Including CORDEX

EGU21-11001 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1 | Highlight

Can Convection‐Permitting Models really Offer Promise of More Certain Extreme Rainfall Projections ?

Giorgia Fosser, Marianna Adinolfi, Nikolina Ban, Danijel Belusic, Ségolène Berthou, Cécile Caillaud, Rita M. Cardoso, Erika Coppola, Hylke De Vries, Andreas Dobler, Hendrik Feldmann, Klaus Goergen, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Geert Lenderink, Hans-Juergen Panitz, Emanuela Pichelli, Pedro M. M. Soares, Samuel Somot, Merja H. Tölle, and Jesus Vergara-Temprado

Compared to standard regional climate models (RCMs), convection-permitting models (CPMs) provide an improved representation of sub-daily precipitation statistics and extremes thanks mainly to the possibility to switch off the deep convection parameterisation, a known source of model error and uncertainties. The more realistic representation of local processes in CPMs leads to a greater confidence in their projections of future changes in short-duration precipitation extremes. Recent literature on CPMs seems to agree on a future increase of extreme precipitation, above Clausius‐Clapeyron scaling in some cases, which is likely to have severe socio-economic impacts.

The quantification of uncertainties on future changes at this resolution has been barely touched. Using the first‐ever ensemble of CPMs run within the UK Climate Projections project, Fosser et al. (2020) found that the climate change signal for extreme summer precipitation may converge in CPMs in contrast to RCMs, thanks to a more realistic representation of the local storm dynamics.

Here we use the first multi-model CPMs ensemble over the greater Alpine region, run under the auspices of the World Climate Research Programme’s (WCRP) Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment Flagship Pilot Study on Convective phenomena at high resolution over Europe and the Mediterranean (Coppola et al. 2020). In our analysis we compared the uncertainties in the CPMs ensemble to the driving models following a similar method to Fosser et al. (2020). In this presentation we will show if multi-model CPMs can really provide more certain extreme rainfall projections then their parent coarser resolution models. 

 

Fosser G, Kendon EJ, Stephenson D, Tucker S (2020) Convection‐Permitting Models Offer Promise of More Certain Extreme Rainfall Projections. Geophys Res Lett 47:0–2. doi: 10.1029/2020GL088151

Coppola, E., Sobolowski, S., Pichelli, E. et al. A first-of-its-kind multi-model convection permitting ensemble for investigating convective phenomena over Europe and the Mediterranean. Clim Dyn 55, 3–34 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-018-4521-8

How to cite: Fosser, G., Adinolfi, M., Ban, N., Belusic, D., Berthou, S., Caillaud, C., Cardoso, R. M., Coppola, E., De Vries, H., Dobler, A., Feldmann, H., Goergen, K., Kendon, E. J., Lenderink, G., Panitz, H.-J., Pichelli, E., Soares, P. M. M., Somot, S., Tölle, M. H., and Vergara-Temprado, J.: Can Convection‐Permitting Models really Offer Promise of More Certain Extreme Rainfall Projections ?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11001, 2021.

EGU21-81 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

The CORDEX‐Australasia ensemble: evaluation and future projections

Jason Evans, Giovanni Di Virgilio, Annette Hirsch, Peter Hoffmann, Armelle Reca Remedio, Fei Ji, Burkhardt Rockel, and Erika Coppola

The World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) has an international initiative called the COordinated Regional climate Downscaling EXperiment (CORDEX). The goal of the initiative is to provide regionally downscaled climate projections for most land regions of the globe, as a compliment to the global climate model projections performed within the Coupled Model Intercomparison Projects (CMIP). CORDEX includes data from both dynamical and statistical downscaling. It is anticipated that the CORDEX dataset will provide a link to the impacts and adaptation community through its better resolution and regional focus. Participation in CORDEX is open and any researchers performing climate downscaling are encourage to engage with the initiative. Here I present the current status, evaluation and future projections for the CORDEX-AustralAsia ensemble.

The CORDEX-Australasia ensemble is the largest regional climate projection ensemble ever created for the region. It is a 20-member ensemble made by 6 regional climate models downscaling 11 global climate models. Overall the ensemble produces a good representation of recent climate. Consistent biases within the ensemble include an underestimation of the diurnal temperature range and an underestimation of precipitation across much of southern Australia. Under a high emissions scenario projected temperature changes by the end of the twenty-first century reach ~ 5 K in the interior of Australia with smaller increases found toward the coast. Projected precipitation changes are towards drying, particularly in the most populated areas of the southwest and southeast of the continent. The projected precipitation change is very seasonal with summer projected to see little change leaning toward an increase. These results provide a foundation enabling future studies of regional climate changes, climate change impacts, and adaptation options for Australia.

How to cite: Evans, J., Di Virgilio, G., Hirsch, A., Hoffmann, P., Reca Remedio, A., Ji, F., Rockel, B., and Coppola, E.: The CORDEX‐Australasia ensemble: evaluation and future projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-81, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-81, 2021.

The answers to the following questions ‘What are the consequences of climate change (warming)…?’ and ‘By when do we have to be prepared for that level of climate change (warming)?’ must be given only with caution. On the one hand, regional or local changes can be inconsistent with global changes, as local processes might not accurately interpreted by global climate models (GCMs) due to their relative coarse resolution. On the other hand, climate model simulations’ outputs are prone to biases compared to observations; furthermore, climate projections can be very different in modelling future temperature characteristics. In this context, while the magnitude of expected change described by a climate model may seem to be reasonable, but the projected temperature is not necessarily realistic (considering the model’s relative bias compared to observations). More specifically, the standard procedure of assessing climate change can be illustrated by taking the mean for a future period (e.g. 2070–2099) and compute the change relative to a reference period (e.g. 1976−2005). Keeping in mind the expected changes based on those projections might come with high degree of uncertainty as simulations might show different mean temperature values for the same assessed periods with even a range of few degrees of °C. When regional climate change is assessed based on at a given regional warming level (WL, e.g. 1.5 °C) added to the observed mean, then the aforementioned uncertainty range is reduced as the models (GCM or regional climate models) are assessed with respect to the same 30-year mean temperature value, but not for the same periods (noting that the WL is defined at regional and not at global scale). Thus the uncertainty of expected changes with regard to temperature can be significantly reduced. In this case an additional uncertainty factor might rise: time, as climate models can reach that WL at different times. Accordingly, we can give information on relative changes with a specific uncertainty as a metric based on the timing of reaching the assessed WL. Aim of the present work is to illustrate the feasibility of this concept for the region of the Carpathian Basin based on high-resolution EURO- and Med-CORDEX simulations.

How to cite: Torma, C. Z.: Investigation of future climate characteristics over the Carpathian Region by “tuning” CORDEX temperature time series – a new perspective, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-570, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-570, 2021.

EGU21-1175 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Climate change projections for the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East based on CORDEX-CORE simulations

George Zittis, Panos Hadjinicolaou, and Jos Lelieveld

Many observation-based and modelling studies have identified the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East (EMME) region as a prominent climate change hot-spot. During the last half century, the region has warmed faster than the global mean, while at the same time changes in the hydrological cycle have been observed. Several studies suggest that these trends are projected to continue and intensify throughout the 21st century, depending on greenhouse gas emission scenarios. To assess climate change impacts on a regional and local level, future climate information of high quality and spatial resolution is required. To provide such information is the objective of CORDEX. The latest advancement of this World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) initiative includes the CORDEX-CORE set of regional experiments that aims at global coverage and was designed to provide regional-level information to the upcoming Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). This state-of-the-art dataset is available at a spatial resolution of 0.22° (about 25 km). We have complemented this ensemble model data with those from two experiments of the MENA-CORDEX initiative that are available at the same resolution. Here, we have analyzed monthly data from 1971 to the end of the current century. We have adopted a multi-domain and multi-model ensemble approach that is found to add value by addressing shortcomings and reducing uncertainties. Our results corroborate and update existing estimations on the transition to drier and hotter conditions in the EMME region. Under a business-as-usual pathway (RCP8.5), the region-average warming at the end of the current century is expected to exceed 5 °C (with respect to the 1986-2005 reference temperature). On the contrary, under a strong mitigation pathway (RCP2.6) this warming can be limited to less than 1.5 °C. Summer warming is projected to exceed these values by 2-3 °C, favoring the conditions for unprecedented heatwaves. On average, precipitation changes are less robust and significant and range between 0 to -15% of the reference values, while locally stronger drying can occur, particularly under RCP8.5.

How to cite: Zittis, G., Hadjinicolaou, P., and Lelieveld, J.: Climate change projections for the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East based on CORDEX-CORE simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1175, 2021.

EGU21-2211 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Impact of aerosols on the future Euro-Mediterranean climate: results from the CORDEX FPS-Aerosol

Pierre Nabat, Samuel Somot, Lola Corre, Eleni Katragkou, Shuping Li, Marc Mallet, Erik van Meijgaard, Vasileios Pavlidis, Joni-Pekka Pietikäinen, Silje Soerland, and Fabien Solmon

The Euro-Mediterranean region is subject to numerous and various aerosol loads, which interact with radiation, clouds and atmospheric dynamics, with ensuing impact on regional climate. However up to now, aerosol variations are hardly taken into account in most regional climate simulations, although anthropogenic emissions have been dramatically reduced in Europe since the 1980s. Moreover, inconsistencies between regional climate models (RCMs) and their driving global model (GCM) have recently been identified in terms of future radiation and temperature evolution, which could be related to the differences in aerosol forcing. 
The present study aims at assessing the role of aerosols in the future evolution of the Euro-Mediterranean climate, using a specific multi-model protocol carried out in the Flagship Pilot Study "Aerosol" of the CORDEX program. This protocol relies on three simulations for each RCM: a historical run (1971-2000) and two future RCP8.5 simulations (2021-2050), a first one with evolving aerosols, and a second one with the same aerosols as in the historical period. Six modeling groups have taken part in this protocol, providing nine triplets of simulations. The analysis of these simulations will be presented here. First results show that the future evolution of aerosols has a significant impact on the evolution of surface radiation and surface temperature. In addition RCM runs taking into account the evolution of aerosols are simulating climate change signal closer to the one of their driving GCM than those with constant aerosols.

How to cite: Nabat, P., Somot, S., Corre, L., Katragkou, E., Li, S., Mallet, M., van Meijgaard, E., Pavlidis, V., Pietikäinen, J.-P., Soerland, S., and Solmon, F.: Impact of aerosols on the future Euro-Mediterranean climate: results from the CORDEX FPS-Aerosol, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2211, 2021.

EGU21-2948 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

A proposal for medicane detection in long high-resolution climate model simulations with a minimal amount of data

Alba de la Vara, Jesús Gutiérrez-Fernández, Juan Jesús González-Alemán, and Miguel Ángel Gaertner

Medicanes are tropical-like cyclones that form in the Mediterranean Sea. Due to their harmful potential, the characterization of medicanes has become an increasingly-studied topic within the scientific community. In the current context of climate change, their future characterization from a climatological perspective can only be attained using high resolution climate model output. The thermal structure of medicanes is generally examined with the Cyclone Phase Space (CPS) described in Hart (2003). This necessitates geopotential data from 300 hPa to 900 hPa every 50 hPa. Notwithstanding, in long, high-resolution climate simulations, model output requires very high storage space and only data from a few geopotential levels are typically saved. To overcome the lack of geopotential data at some levels, available model data are vertically interpolated in order to obtain data for the 13 levels required. In this work, we use high horizontal resolution data from the ERA-5 reanalysis (1979 - 2018) to analyze the climatology of medicanes simulated using the 13 vertical levels required based on Hart (2003), as well as different combinations of geopotential data from a few selected levels. Our results allow us to propose, for the first time, a limited set of recommended geopotential levels needed to adequately detect medicanes in long, high resolution climate change simulations, taking into account the associated limitations of output data storage.

How to cite: de la Vara, A., Gutiérrez-Fernández, J., González-Alemán, J. J., and Gaertner, M. Á.: A proposal for medicane detection in long high-resolution climate model simulations with a minimal amount of data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2948, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2948, 2021.

EGU21-3811 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

numerical simulations of Surface Solar Radiation over southern Africa for the past and future

Chao Tang, Béatrice Morel, Martin Wild, Benjamin Pohl, Babatunde Abiodun, Chris Lennard, and Miloud Bessafi

This study evaluates the possible impacts of climate change on Surface Solar Radiation (SSR), as a renewable energy resource, in Southern Africa (SA). Performance of climate models in reproducing the mean states and long-term trend of SSR are assessed by validating five Regional Climate Models (RCM) that participated in the Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment program over Africa (CORDEX-Africa) along with their ten driving General Circulation Models (GCMs) from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) over SA. Then the possible impacts of climate change on SSR are evaluated. The uncertainties in the GCM-RCM model chains have also been quantitatively estimated.

Results show that in the past (1) GCMs overestimate SSR over SA in terms of their multi-model mean by about 1 W/m2 (compensation of opposite biases over sub-regions) and 7.5 W/m2 in austral summer and winter respectively compared to SARAH-2 (Surface Solar Radiation Data Set—Heliosat Edition 2); However, RCMs underestimate SSR in both seasons with Mean Bias Errors of about −30 W/m2in austral summer and about −14 W/m2 in winter. And the discrepancies in the simulated SSR are larger in the RCMs than in the GCMs. (2) In terms of trend during the “brightening” period 1990–2005, both GCMs and RCMs (driven by ERA-Interim and GCMs) simulate an SSR trend of less than 1 W/m2 per decade. However, variations of SSR trend exist among different references data. (3) For individual RCM models, their SSR bias fields seem rather insensitive with respect to the different lateral forcings provided by ERA-INTERIM and various GCMs, in line with previous findings over Europe.

In future, (1) multi-model mean projections of SSR trends are consistent between the GCMs and their nested RCMs. Two areas with statistically significant SSR changes are found: over the center of SA, GCMs and RCMs project a statistically significant increase in SSR by 2099 of about +1.5 W/m2 per decade in RCP8.5 during the DJF season. Over Eastern Equatorial Africa a statistically significant decrease in SSR of about −2 W/m2 per decade in RCP8.5 is found in the ensemble means in DJF. (3) SSR projections are fairly similar between RCP8.5 and RCP4.5 before 2050 and then the differences between those two scenarios increase up to about 1 W/m2 per decade with larger changes in RCP8.5 than in RCP4.5 scenario. (4) These SSR evolutions are generally consistent with projected changes in Cloud Cover Fraction over SA and may also related to the changes in atmosphere water vapor content. (5) SSR change signals emerge earlier out of internal variability estimated from ERA-Interim in DJF in RCMs than in GCMs, which suggests a higher sensitivity of RCMs to the forcing RCP scenarios than their driving GCMs in simulating SSR changes. (6) The uncertainty in SSR change projections is likely dominated by the internal climate variability before 2050, and after that model and scenario uncertainties become as important as internal variability until the end of the 21st century.

How to cite: Tang, C., Morel, B., Wild, M., Pohl, B., Abiodun, B., Lennard, C., and Bessafi, M.: numerical simulations of Surface Solar Radiation over southern Africa for the past and future, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3811, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3811, 2021.

EGU21-3855 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Realised added value in dynamical downscaling of Australian climate change

Giovanni Di Virgilio, Jason P. Evans, Alejandro Di Luca, Michael R. Grose, Vanessa Round, and Marcus Thatcher

Coarse resolution global climate models (GCM) cannot resolve fine-scale drivers of regional climate, which is the scale where climate adaptation decisions are made. Regional climate models (RCMs) generate high-resolution projections by dynamically downscaling GCM outputs. However, evidence of where and when downscaling provides new information about both the current climate (added value, AV) and projected climate change signals, relative to driving data, is lacking. Seasons and locations where CORDEX-Australasia ERA-Interim and GCM-driven RCMs show AV for mean and extreme precipitation and temperature are identified. A new concept is introduced, ‘realised added value’, that identifies where and when RCMs simultaneously add value in the present climate and project a different climate change signal, thus suggesting plausible improvements in future climate projections by RCMs. ERA-Interim-driven RCMs add value to the simulation of summer-time mean precipitation, especially over northern and eastern Australia. GCM-driven RCMs show AV for precipitation over complex orography in south-eastern Australia during winter and widespread AV for mean and extreme minimum temperature during both seasons, especially over coastal and high-altitude areas. RCM projections of decreased winter rainfall over the Australian Alps and decreased summer rainfall over northern Australia are collocated with notable realised added value. Realised added value averaged across models, variables, seasons and statistics is evident across the majority of Australia and shows where plausible improvements in future climate projections are conferred by RCMs. This assessment of varying RCM capabilities to provide realised added value to GCM projections can be applied globally to inform climate adaptation and model development.

How to cite: Di Virgilio, G., Evans, J. P., Di Luca, A., Grose, M. R., Round, V., and Thatcher, M.: Realised added value in dynamical downscaling of Australian climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3855, 2021.

EGU21-4738 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Cluster analysis of the ensembles of EURO-CORDEX simulations

Tímea Kalmár, Rita Pongrácz, and Ildikó Pieczka

Climate models play an important role in global and regional climate change research, improving our understanding and predictability of climate behaviour. The CORDEX (Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment) program was established to provide a framework for the assessment of Regional Climate Models (RCMs) and to contribute to climate change impact assessment and adaptation processes. The climate simulations are based on multiple dynamical and empirical-statistical downscaling models forced by multiple global climate models (GCMs). The motivation behind the use of multiple models in climate change research is to cover different sources of uncertainties, that is why it is recommended to use all available simulations in climate change studies. However, many climate change impact studies face difficulties (e.g., limited computing resources or free access to climate data) using all the available simulations, and therefore it is quite often the case that only subsets of simulations are used. Another problem is that the ensembles of GCM-RCM simulations are too big to be handled by many impact modellers. The selection of model simulations is subjective in most cases, and it is often reduced by hand-picking climate simulations depending on the partners involved in the project. An objective method can be based on cluster analysis, which is a flexible and unsupervised numerical technique that involves the sorting of data into statistically similar groups. These groups can be either (i) determined entirely by the properties of the data themselves or (ii) guided by user constraints. In the present study, we focus on Central-Eastern Europe, because the model simulations are particularly uncertain in the precipitation and temperature distribution over this region. The aim of the study is to develop a method based on the precipitation and temperature values of 55 EURO-CORDEX simulations for a near-present historical period (1995–2014), which could help to select suitable subsets of ensembles of climate simulations tailored to the needs within climate change impact studies.

 

Acknowledgement: This study is supported by the ÚNKP-20-3 New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund.

How to cite: Kalmár, T., Pongrácz, R., and Pieczka, I.: Cluster analysis of the ensembles of EURO-CORDEX simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4738, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4738, 2021.

EGU21-4852 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Scale-dependent representation of extreme precipitation processes in regional and CPM scale simulations for the greater Alpine region

Alberto Caldas-Alvarez, Hendrik Feldmann, and Joaquim G. Pinto

Extreme precipitation events with return periods above 100-years (Most Extreme Precipitation Events; MEPE) are rare events by definition, as the observational record covers very few of such events. Therefore, our knowledge is insufficient to assess their potential intensities and physical processes on different scales. To fill this gap, large regional climate ensembles, like the one provided by the German Decadal Climate Predictions (MiKlip) project (> 10.000 years), are of great value as they provide a larger sample size of such rare events. The RCM ensemble samples present day climate conditions multiple times (Ehmele et al., 2020) with a resolution of 25 km, and thus it does not resolve the convection permitting scales (CPM).

In this study, we aim to combine the large RCM ensemble with episodic CPM-scale downscaling simulations to derive a better statistical and process related representation of MEPEs for Central Europe. As a first step, we evaluate two re-analysis driven long-term simulations with COSMO-CLM (CCLM) from MiKlip and CORDEX-FPS Convection with respect to their scale-dependent representation.

The simulations span the period 1971 to 2016 with the 25 km simulation and are forced by ERA40 until 1979 and by ERA-interim afterwards. The CPM simulation (~3 km) is forced by ERA-40 between 1971 and 1999 and by ERA-interim between 2000 and 2016. We validate the simulations against E-OBS (25 km) and the unique HYdrologische RASterdatensätze (HYRAS) precipitation data set (5 km). The investigation area is the greater Alpine area. We employ a Precipitation Severity Index (PSI) adapted from extreme wind detection (Leckebusch et al., 2008; Pinto et al., 2012) for extreme precipitation cases. The advantage of the PSI is its ability to account for extreme grid point precipitation as well as spatial coverage and event duration. The events are categorized objectively into composite Weather Types (WT) to enable further generalization of the findings.

The results show a clear overestimation of precipitation for the analysed period and area by the RCMs at both resolutions. However, large differences exist the representation of extreme precipitation. Compared to observations, the 3 km (25km) resolution overestimates (underestimates) precipitation intensity for extreme cases. This agrees with previous literature. Five different WTs are identified for the analysed period, with Autumn-Winter WT being the most common, followed by convective summer WT. The Autumn-Winter WT is characterized by deep, cold, low-pressure areas located over Northern Europe. Summer WT cases are characterized by stable high-pressure situations affected by incurring small low-pressure systems on its western flank (convective-prone situations). Regarding the scale dependency of precipitation processes, the coarse resolution tends to overestimate surface moisture in situations of heavy precipitation, leading to larger latent instability (CAPE) in the 25 km resolution than in its 3 km counterpart. Furthermore, a large-scale dependency is found in summer extreme precipitation cases for two stability-related variables, Equivalent Potential Temperature (θe850) at 850 hPa and moisture flux at the Lower Free Troposphere (LFT-moisture). In these cases, the overestimation (underestimation) of  and LFT-moisture by either resolution is in line with their precipitation overestimation (underestimation).

How to cite: Caldas-Alvarez, A., Feldmann, H., and Pinto, J. G.: Scale-dependent representation of extreme precipitation processes in regional and CPM scale simulations for the greater Alpine region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4852, 2021.

EGU21-4994 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Projected changes in frequency of compound events of strong wind and low temperature in EURO-CORDEX climate models

Eva Plavcová, Ondřej Lhotka, and Jan Stryhal

Compound events of weather extremes considerably affect various sectors of human society and natural environment and therefore it is essential to understand projected changes of their characteristics in the future climate. We focus on the combination of low temperature and high wind velocity, because their compound effect strongly influences human thermal comfort in cold weather, as characterized by the wind chill factor. In our study, we analyse frequency of this extreme events and projected changes of their characteristics in simulations of RCMs from the EURO-CORDEX project. We investigate a set of 9 simulations of 3 different RCMs driven by 3 different global climate models which allow us to analyse the influence of driving data on the RCM’s outputs. We focus on the Central European domain defined between 48–52°N and 10–19°E. The frequency of the compound events from historical simulations over 1970-2100 are compared to the projected frequencies under the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 emission scenarios for the end of the 21st century (2070-2100). Since local climate is relatively tightly linked to a large-scale atmospheric circulation over Europe in winter, we also evaluate links of the compound events to the atmospheric circulation.

How to cite: Plavcová, E., Lhotka, O., and Stryhal, J.: Projected changes in frequency of compound events of strong wind and low temperature in EURO-CORDEX climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4994, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4994, 2021.

EGU21-5153 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

GCM Model Selection Procedure for Downscaling

Carolyne Pickler and Thomas Mölg

Downscaling has been widely used in studies of regional and/or local climate as it yields greater spatial resolution than general circulation models (GCM) can provide.  It can approached in two distinct ways: 1) Statistical and 2) Dynamical.  Statistical downscaling utilizes mathematical relationships between large-scale and regional/local climate to transform GCM or reanalysis data to a higher spatial resolution.  Dynamical downscaling comprises forcing the lateral boundaries of a regional climate model with reanalysis or GCM data.  However, there is no set technique to select said GCM(s).

A comprehensive yet easily applicable selection procedure was created to address this.  Using reanalysis data and/or observational data, the space-time climatic anomalies and the mean state of the climate are evaluated for the region of interest.  East Africa was utilized as a case study and GISS-E2-H r6i1p3 was found to perform the strongest.  This procedure cannot, however, tell whether the models can reproduce the key processes of the region.  To examine this, the ability of the models to simulate the Indian Ocean Dipole were evaluated.  It was found that higher ranked models were better able to capture it than lower ranked ones.  Furthermore, to ensure that a higher ranked model yielded a better downscaling simulation, three 10-year regional climate model simulations over East Africa were undertaken, where they were respectively forced by the highest ranked GCM (GISS-E2-H r6i1p3), the lowest ranked GCM (IPSL-CM5A-LR r4i1p1) and the MERRA-2 reanalysis product.  The simulated surface temperature and precipitation for Equatorial East Africa were compared with a gridded observational dataset (CRU TS 4.04).  Results showed that the higher ranked GCM produced a better downscaled simulation than the lower ranked one, a result that was more evident for surface temperature than precipitation.

How to cite: Pickler, C. and Mölg, T.: GCM Model Selection Procedure for Downscaling, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5153, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5153, 2021.

EGU21-5389 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Projections of the Fire Weather Index (FWI) using CORDEX-CORE simulations

Francesca Raffaele and Rita Nogherotto

Changes in global fire activity are influenced by a multitude of factors including land-cover change, policies, and climatic conditions. In this study we focus our attention on climate, investigating how relative humidity, wind, temperature and precipitation changes can act together in fire danger. Within the CORDEX-CORE initiative, two regional climate models (RCM) have been used at  0.22° resolution and to downscale 3 global climate models (GCMs) from the CMIP5 project. The analysis is carried out over 9 CORDEX domains for two climate scenarios namely the RCP2.6 and the RCP8.5. The high resolution regional climate simulations have been used to evaluate changes in the fire danger by means of the Fire Weather Index (FWI).  The attention is focused on the Mediterranean Basin and in South America, as well as in Australia and in the North America domains. Both climate scenarios show similar projections for the near future time slice (2031-2050) with an increase of the index in those areas that are already affected by seasonal fires such as Spain and Southern Italy for the Mediterranean Basin and the central band of Brazil. For the future time slice (2081-2100) the signal increases, and it is stronger for the RCP8.5 scenario in all regions as expected.

 

How to cite: Raffaele, F. and Nogherotto, R.: Projections of the Fire Weather Index (FWI) using CORDEX-CORE simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5389, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5389, 2021.

EGU21-5900 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Performance of RegCM4 in Simulating Subtropical Cyclones over the Southwestern South Atlantic Ocean 

Rosmeri da Rocha, Eduardo de Jesus, Michelle Reboita, Natália Crespo, and Luiz Gozzo

Subtropical cyclones (SCs) climatology is evaluated in three simulations of Regional Climate Modeling version 4 (RegCM4) and in its global climate models (GCMs) drivers (HadGEM2-ES, MPI-ESM-MR and GFDL-ESM2M) over the South America domain. Three algorithms are applied to identify the SCs: the first tracks all cyclones, the second computes the thermal structure of the cyclones based on the Cyclone Phase Space (CPS) methodology, and the third automatically selects only the cyclones with subtropical features. After that, two ensembles were performed (RegCM4 and GCMs) and their climatologies are validated through comparisons with ERA-Interim reanalysis for the period 1979-2005. Over the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean, the annual average and standard deviation of SCs are 8.0± 2.5, 7.6± 2.3 and 7.2± 3.0, respectively, in ERA-Interim, RegCM4 and GCMs. Although both ensembles have a good performance in simulating the climatology of SCs, RegCM4 over perform the GCMs showing a better skill in representing both the annual mean and the interannual variability measured by the standard deviation. Moreover, RegCM4 simulates the spatial pattern of the cyclogenesis density closer to ERA-Interim than GCMs, which is another added value of the regional downscaling. SCs represent a small fraction of all cyclones over the region, which is 4.1% in ERA-Interim and GCMs and 3.5% in RegCM4. The relative importance of SCs to the total of cyclones increased to ~40% in the region near the southeast coast of Brazil. In terms of seasonal mean, simulations are able to capture the observed pattern that has the austral summer as the most cyclogenetic season. 

How to cite: da Rocha, R., de Jesus, E., Reboita, M., Crespo, N., and Gozzo, L.: Performance of RegCM4 in Simulating Subtropical Cyclones over the Southwestern South Atlantic Ocean , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5900, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5900, 2021.

EGU21-6282 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Projected changes to severe thunderstorm environments as a result of 21st century warming in CORDEX-CORE simulations

Russell Glazer, José Abraham Torres‑Alavez, Filippo Giorgi, Erika Coppola, Sushant Das, Moetasim Ashfaq, and Taleena Sines

            Dangerous weather related to severe thunderstorms including tornadoes, high-winds, and hail cause significant damage globally to life and property every year. Yet the impact on these storms from a warming climate remains a difficult task due to their small scale and transient nature. Here, we present a study in which the changes to the large-scale environments in which severe thunderstorms form were investigated during 21st century warming (RCP2.6 and RCP8.5) in a group of RegCM CORDEX-CORE simulations. Severe potential is measured in terms of CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy) and shear during the severe seasons in three regions which are known to currently be prone to severe hazards: North America, the southeastern coast of South America east of the Andes, and eastern India and Bangladesh. In every region environments supportive for severe thunderstorms are projected to increase during the warm season months in both RCP2.6 and RCP8.5 during the 21st century. The number of days supportive for severe thunderstorms increases by several days per season over the vast majority of each region by the end of the century. In the case of RCP2.6, where greenhouse gas forcing is relatively weak compared to RCP8.5, there is still a consistent positive trend in the impact on severe days. The simulations using RCP8.5 forcing show large changes to the annual cycle of severe weather as well as the number of days supportive for severe weather per season. In some regions, like for example Northern Argentina along the Andes mountains, the number of days with severe conditions present increases by nearly 100% by the end of the century. Analyzing the CAPE and shear trends during the 21st century we find seasonal and regionally specific changes driving the increased severe potential. 21st century surface warming is clearly driving a robust increase in CAPE in all regions, however poleward displacement of vertical shear in the future leads to the movement of severe environments over North America and South America. We would also like to present a preliminary look at the next phase of this project which will apply similar methods to an ensemble of 11o Euro-CORDEX simulations to investigate severe conditions over the European region in the future.

How to cite: Glazer, R., Torres‑Alavez, J. A., Giorgi, F., Coppola, E., Das, S., Ashfaq, M., and Sines, T.: Projected changes to severe thunderstorm environments as a result of 21st century warming in CORDEX-CORE simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6282, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6282, 2021.

EGU21-6318 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1 | Highlight

Investigating the representation of heatwaves in km-scale simulations

Lorenzo Sangelantoni and Stefan Sobolowski

Interactions between land and atmosphere play an important role in the climate system on a wide range of spatial and time scales. Soil moisture is of particular importance as it constrains evapotranspiration, thereby affecting the surface energy and water balance. This influence then extends to extreme events such as droughts and heatwaves and even manifests as a local source of predictability.

Several studies suggest that high resolution model simulations which explicitly resolve convective processes can present substantially different soil moisture-precipitation feedback compared to simulations where convection is parameterized. In some instances, this feedback even changes sign between the two. The cause is from different soil moisture content (mostly in summer season) in parameterized vs. explicit simulations, which results in a different partitioning between heat fluxes, in turn modulating the amplitude and persistence of heatwave events.

The present study investigates modulation of heatwaves in km-scale convection permitting simulations during the 2000-2009 period. A second research topic is understanding whether km-scale modeling is beneficial for the representation of this phenomenon. Here, we consider a subset of five WRF RCM simulations within the CORDEX Convection Flagship Pilot Study. Further simulations from other modeling consortia are currently being analyzed for a truly multi-model perspective.

The analyses focus on the comparison of heatwaves simulated at convection resolving (~3km grid spacing) and non-convection resolving (~15km grid spacing) scales for each RCM. The five RCMs constitute a small multi-physics ensemble, where each member presents a different setup in terms of combinations of physical schemes. Analyses cover three different subdomains of the greater Alpine region: the Alps, Po valley, and Adriatic region.

Preliminary results show that, at very high resolutions with explicitly resolved convection, heatwave events exhibit lower soil moisture content than coarser resolution simulations. This feature affects the surface energy balance in terms of heat fluxes partition, with a subsequent impact on the maximum temperature, which is higher in the convection permitting simulations and generally in better agreement with observations. However, the heatwave maximum temperature modulation produced at the convection permitting scale, cannot be fully explained by differences in heat fluxes partition. This aspect suggests that also a different representation of small-scale circulation features is likely to play a role in determining the temperature modulation.

For areas with complex topography (e.g., Alps), results indicate a more consistent topography-driven soil moisture spatial patterns and related temporal evolution during heatwaves. At the same time, over different domains (e.g., Po valley) an excessive drying in the convection permitting RCMs is observed.

Finally, in agreement with other studies, the resulting drier conditions characterizing convection permitting RCMs likely arise from consistently longer (up to double) mean dry spell length compared to those from the simulations with parameterized convection. These findings shed light on how altered soil moisture-precipitation feedback can affect temperature extremes representation leading to ask at what extent heatwaves projected changes are dependent on the resolution considered.

How to cite: Sangelantoni, L. and Sobolowski, S.: Investigating the representation of heatwaves in km-scale simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6318, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6318, 2021.

EGU21-6676 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

COSMO-CLM Russian Arctic hindcast 1980 – 2016: experimental design and first evaluation results

Vladimir Platonov and Mikhail Varentsov

Detailed long-term hydrometeorological dataset for Russian Arctic seas was created using hydrodynamic modelling via regional nonhydrostatic atmospheric model COSMO-CLM for 1980 – 2016 period with ~12 km grid. Many test experiments with different model options for summertime and wintertime periods were evaluated to determine the best model configuration. Verification has showed that optimal model setup included usage of ERA-Interim reanalysis as forcing data, new model version 5.05 with a so-called ICON-based physics and spectral nudging technique. Final long-term experiments were simulated on the MSU Supercomputer Complex “Lomonosov-2” become more than 120 Tb data volume excluding many side files.

Primary evaluation of obtained dataset was done for surface wind and temperature variables. There are some mesoscale details in wind sped climatology reproduced by COSMO-CLM dataset including the Svalbard, Severnaya Zemlya islands, and the western coast of the Novaya Zemlya island. At the same time, high wind speed frequencies based on COSMO-CLM data increased compared to ERA-Interim, especially over Barents Sea, Arctic islands (Novaya Zemlya) and some seacoasts and mainland areas. Regional details are manifested in wind speed increase and marked well for large lakes and orography (Taymyr and Kola peninsulas, Eastern Siberia highlands).

Comparison of two periods (1980 ­­– 1990 and 2010 – 2016) has shown that spatial distributions of high wind speed frequencies are very similar, but there are some detailed differences. Wind speed frequencies above 20.8 m/s has been decreased in the last decade over the Novaya Zemlya, southwest from Svalbard, middle Siberia inlands; however, it has been increased over Franz Josef Land and Severnaya Zemlya.

Large-scale temperature climatology patterns have shown a good accordance between ERA-Interim and COSMO-CLM datasets. Significant temperature patterns are detailed relief and lakes manifestations, e.g., over Scandinavian mountains, Eastern Siberian and Taymyr highlands, Novaya Zemlya ranges. The added value in the 1% temperature percentile patterns is more pronounced, especially in the mountainous Eastern Siberia. Regional features are prominent over Onega and Ladoga lakes, and western Kara Sea. There is a remarkable warming over islands and Eastern Siberia valleys, and more clear temperature differentiation between ridges and valleys.

The nearest prospect of the COSMO-CLM Russian Arctic dataset application is its comparison with other appropriate datasets including reanalyses, satellite data, observations, etc. This will provide important and useful information about opportunities and restrictions of this dataset regarding different variables and specific regions, outline the limits of its applicability and get framework of possible tasks. The other important task is to share this dataset with scientific community.

How to cite: Platonov, V. and Varentsov, M.: COSMO-CLM Russian Arctic hindcast 1980 – 2016: experimental design and first evaluation results, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6676, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6676, 2021.

EGU21-12832 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

A Regional Climate Model Laboratory for Understanding Coastal Climate

Travis O'Brien, Thomas Burkle, Michael Krauter, and Thomas Trapp

Midlatitude western coastal regions are recognized as being important for the global energy cycle, marine and terrestrial biodiversity, and regional economies.  These coastal regions exhibit a rich range of weather and climate phenomena, including persistent stratocumulus clouds, sea-breeze circulations, coastally-trapped Kelvin waves, and wind-driven upwelling. During the summer season, when impacts from transient synoptic systems are relatively reduced, the local climate is governed by a complex set of interactions among the atmosphere, land, and ocean.  This complexity has so far inhibited basic understanding of the drivers of western coastal climate, climate variability, and climate change.

As a way of simplifying the system, we have developed a hierarchical regional climate model experimental framework focused on the western United States. We modify the International Centre for Theoretical Physics RegCM4 to use steady-state initial, lateral, and top-of-model boundary conditions: average July insolation (no diurnal cycle) and average meteorological state (winds, temperature, humidity, surface pressure).  This July Base State simulation rapidly reaches a steady state solution that closely resembles the observed mean climate and the mean climate achieved using RegCM4 in a standard reanalysis-driven configuration.  It is particularly notable that the near-coastal stratocumulus field is spatially similar to the satellite-observed stratocumulus field during arbitrary July days: including gaps in stratocumulus coverage downwind of capes. We run similar Base State simulations for the other calendar months and find that these simulations mimic the annual cycle.  This suggests that the summer coastal stratocumulus field results from the steady-state response of the marine boundary layer to summertime climatological forcing; if true for the real world, this would imply that stratocumulus cloud fraction, within a given month, is temporally modulated by deviations from the summer base state (e.g., transient synoptic disturbances that interrupt the cloud field).  We describe modifications to this simplified experimental framework aimed at understanding the factors that govern stratocumulus cloud fraction and its variability.

How to cite: O'Brien, T., Burkle, T., Krauter, M., and Trapp, T.: A Regional Climate Model Laboratory for Understanding Coastal Climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12832, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12832, 2021.

EGU21-6999 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Evaluating the ability of NA-CORDEX to simulate the seasonal modes of precipitation variability across the Western United States: Does resolution matter?

Jonathan Meyer, Shih-Yu (Simon) Wang, Robert Gillies, and Jin-Ho Yoon

The western U.S. precipitation climatology simulated by the NA-CORDEX regional climate model ensembles are examined to evaluate the capability of the 0.44° and 0.22° resolutionensembles to reproduce 1) the annual and semi-annual precipitation cycle of several hydrologically important western U.S. regions and 2) localized seasonality in the amount and timing of precipitation. Collectively, when compared against observation-based gridded precipitation, NA-CORDEX RCMs driven by ERA-Interim reanalysis at the higher resolution 0.22° domain resolution dramatically outperformed the 0.44° ensemble over the 1950-2005 historical periods. Furthermore, the ability to capture the annual and semi-annual modes of variability was starkly improved in the higher resolution 0.22° ensemble. The higher resolution members reproduced more consistent spatial patterns of variance featuring lower errors in magnitude—especially with respect to the winter-summer and spring-fall seasonality. A great deal of spread in model performance was found for the semi-annual cycles, although the higher-resolution ensemble exhibited a more coherent clustering of performance metrics. In general, model performance was a function of which RCM was used, while future trend scenarios seem to cluster around which GCM was downscaled.


Future projections of precipitation patterns from the 0.22° NA-CORDEX RCMs driven by the RCP4.5 “stabilization scenario” and the RCP8.5 “high emission” scenario were analyzed to examine trends to the “end of century” (i.e. 2050-2099) precipitation patterns. Except for the Desert Southwest’s spring season, the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios show a consensus change towards an increase in winter and spring precipitation throughout all regions of interest with the RCP8.5 scenario containing a greater number of ensemble members simulating greater wetting trends. The future winter-summer mode of variability exhibited a general consensus towards increasing variability with greatest change found over the region’s terrain suggesting a greater year-to-year variability of the region’s orographic response to the strength and location of the mid-latitude jet streams and storm track. Increasing spring-fall precipitation variability suggests an expanding influence of tropical moisture advection associated with the North American Monsoon, although we note that like many future monsoon projections, a spring “convective barrier” was also apparent in the NA-CORDEX ensembles.

How to cite: Meyer, J., Wang, S.-Y. (., Gillies, R., and Yoon, J.-H.: Evaluating the ability of NA-CORDEX to simulate the seasonal modes of precipitation variability across the Western United States: Does resolution matter?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6999, 2021.

Hindukush Karakorum and Himalayan (HKH) is a unique region with a vast number of glaciers and lies in the north of the South Asia landmass, which serves as the main reservoir for the South Asian freshwater resources. By using CORDEX-CORE downscaled simulations with ICTP Regional Climate Model (RegCM4.7) the climate change impact on the water resources of the HKH region is analysed. HKH contains Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra water basins, which are feed from both snow as well as precipitation. Due to the temperature increase over this region, the snowmelt timing will be affected, and therefore the snowmelt driven runoff (SDR) in the whole HKH basin. This effect will be combined with the projected increase of precipitation and in particular convective precipitation mostly due to extreme precipitation increase. As a result for the whole HKH basin, the water year will be longer with a shift (negative) toward the earlier months of the year of the time when the 25th (~2-3 months), 50th( ~1month), and 75th (~1 month) percentile of the total runoff is observed in a certain point, in the upper part of the basin and a positive shift (~10 days) in the lower part of the basin for the 50th and 75th percentile. The results show that the Indus basin is the one most affected by the snow melt time change followed by the Brahmaputra and Ganges as the last one. This study indicates that changing climate may result in a shift in the discharge timing over the HKH region and this information may be crucial for planning the mitigation and adaptation actions like for example building dams, changing dam regulation options, and changing agriculture strategies.

How to cite: Shafeeq, W., Coppola, E., and Di Sante, F.: Impact of climate change on runoff timing over the Hindukush Karakorum Himalaya (HKH) region using CORDEX-CORE scenario simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7549, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7549, 2021.

EGU21-7986 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Estimating internal variability from relatively short regional-climate simulations

Hylke de Vries, Geert Lenderink, and Karin van der Wiel

Convection permitting regional climate models (CP-RCMs, typical horizontal resolution O(1-3km)) are currently state of the art when it comes to simulating regional climate. Their level of resolved spatial detail and realistic behaviour of for example summer convection is unprecedented. Consequently, impact modelers and even society at large have a strong interest in their products. However, because the computational demands of running such CP-RCMs are still huge, most of the simulations to date are relatively short, typically on the order of 10 years. Future trends are then derived from differences between two single time-slice experiments.

In contrast, conventional regional climate models (RCMs), that operate on typical “CORDEX” resolution (O(10km)), nowadays are relatively cheap to run, making it feasible to generate large ensembles of long transient integrations. These ensembles allow for a better determination of the amplitude of the internal variability and therefore come with higher signal-to-noise ratios. Invariably, it turns out that internal variability on the 10-year time scale (i.e., the typical time scale of the CP-RCM simulations) is considerable, if not very large for climate parameters like mean precipitation and temperature, let alone for climate extremes. This not only holds for the RCM results of course, but also for the CP-RCMs, perhaps even more strongly.

Two questions arise. First, to what extent are the mean trends derived from CP-RCM simulations meaningful given the large amplitude of internal variability at time scales used for the simulation? Second, how can we estimate the amplitude of internal variability at the 10-year time scale in the first place? We examine answers to these two basic questions in the GCM/RCM world where large ensembles are routinely available. The expectation is that some of the lessons learned here will carry over to the CP-RCM world.

How to cite: de Vries, H., Lenderink, G., and van der Wiel, K.: Estimating internal variability from relatively short regional-climate simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7986, 2021.

EGU21-8376 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Representation of precipitation and top-of-atmosphere radiation in a multi-model convection- permitting ensemble for the Lake Victoria Basin (East-Africa)

Nicole P.M. van Lipzig, Jonas Van de Walle, Wim Thiery, Matthias Demuzere, Grigory Nikulin, Russell Glazer, Erika Coppola, Joaquim G. Pinto, Andreas H. Fink, Patrick Ludwig, Dave Rowell, Ségolène Berthou, Declan Finney, and John Marsham

Extreme weather events, such as heavy precipitation, hail storms, heat waves, droughts and strong wind gusts have a detrimental impact on East African societies. The Lake Victoria Basin (LVB) is especially vulnerable, due to a large and growing population at risk from flooding. Moreover, nightly storms on the lake often catch fishermen by surprise. As the frequency and intensity of weather and climate extremes in the region is projected to further increase substantially with climate change, so do the risks. This has potentially major consequences for livelihoods and policy. The ultimate aim of the CORDEX Flagship Pilot Study ELVIC (Climate Extremes in the Lake Victoria Basin) is therefore to investigate how extreme weather events will evolve in the future in the LVB and to provide improved information to the impact community. ELVIC brings together different research groups that perform simulations with multiple high-resolution regional climate models operating at the convection-permitting scale (CPS) (https://ees.kuleuven.be/elvic). As a first step towards this overall goal, the added value of the CPS on the representation of deep convective systems in Equatorial Africa is assessed. For this purpose, 10-year present-day model simulations were carried out with five regional climate models at both parameterized and convection-permitting scales, namely COSMO-CLM, RegCM, AROME, WRF and MetUM . 

Similarly to other regions in the world, there is no unanimous improvement nor deterioration in the representation of the spatial distribution of total rainfall and the seasonal cycle when going to the CPS. Moreover, substantial biases in the multi-annual averages (up to 30 W m-2) and seasonal cycle in Top-Of-Atmosphere (TOA) upward radiative fluxes remain, both in some models with parameterized and with explicitly resolved convection. Most substantial systematic improvements were found in the representation of the diurnal cycle in precipitation, the diurnal cycle in TOA radiation, some metrics for precipitation intensity and number of rain events. More specifically, the timing of the daily maximum in precipitation is systematically delayed when going to the CPS, thereby improving the agreement with observations. In particular, peaktime of precipitation strongly improves over land, especially at the shores of the lake, indicative of a better representation of the impact of the lake-land-mountain circulations on the convection at CPS. The underestimation in the 90th rainfall quantile of three-hourly precipitation in the parameterized models is alleviated. For the 95th and 99th percentile of precipitation no clear improvement nor deterioration is found, which might be related to poor observational constraints on extreme precipitation. The large overestimation in the total number of rainy events is alleviated when going to the CPS. The diurnal range in the radiative fluxes at the TOA strongly improves when going to CPS, especially for the longwave. All this indicates that the representation of the convective systems is strongly improved when going to CPS, giving confidence that the models are a valuable tool for studying how extreme precipitation events evolve in the future in the LVB.

How to cite: van Lipzig, N. P. M., Van de Walle, J., Thiery, W., Demuzere, M., Nikulin, G., Glazer, R., Coppola, E., Pinto, J. G., Fink, A. H., Ludwig, P., Rowell, D., Berthou, S., Finney, D., and Marsham, J.: Representation of precipitation and top-of-atmosphere radiation in a multi-model convection- permitting ensemble for the Lake Victoria Basin (East-Africa), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8376, 2021.

EGU21-8849 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Applying the new spatially distributed Added Value Index and Climate Change Downscaling Signal for Regional Climate Models to high-resolution EURO-CORDEX and convection permitting scale simulations

James Ciarlo, Erika Coppola, Emanuela Pichelli, and Jose Abraham Torres Alavez and the FPS-Conv Team

Downscaling data from General Circulation Models (GCMs) with Regional Climate Models (RCMs) is a computationally expensive process, even more so running at the convection permitting scale (CP). Despite the high-resolution products of these simulations, the Added Value (AV) of these runs compared to their driving models is an important factor for consideration. A new method was recently developed to quantify the AV of historical simulations as well as the Climate Change Downscaling Signal (CCDS) of forecast runs. This method presents these quantities spatially and thus the specific regions with the most AV can be identified and understood.

An analysis of daily precipitation from a 55-model EURO-CORDEX ensemble (at 12 km resolution) was assessed using this method. It revealed positive AV throughout the domain with greater emphasis in regions of complex topography, coast-lines, and the tropics. Similar CCDS was obtained when assessing the RCP 8.5 far future runs in these domains. This paper looks more closely at the CCDS obtained with this method and compares it to other climate change signals described in other studies.

The same method is now being applied to assess the AV and CCDS of daily precipitation from an ensemble of models at the CP scale (~3 km) over different domains within Europe. The current stage of the analysis is also looking into the AV of using hourly precipitation instead of daily.

How to cite: Ciarlo, J., Coppola, E., Pichelli, E., and Torres Alavez, J. A. and the FPS-Conv Team: Applying the new spatially distributed Added Value Index and Climate Change Downscaling Signal for Regional Climate Models to high-resolution EURO-CORDEX and convection permitting scale simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8849, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8849, 2021.

In the frame of the European Climate Prediction system (EUCP) H2020 project and COordinated Regional climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX), we have performed the ERA-Interim driven regional climate simulations with the coupled atmosphere (WRF)-land surface (ORCHIDEE) RegIPSL model at 20 km (EUR20; with parameterized convection) and 3 km (SWE3; convection-permitting/resolving) horizontal grid spacing over the Iberian Peninsula (IP) for the period of 2000-2009. The Iberian Peninsula is an area with a rich diversity of climates which is affected by several high impact extreme events such as droughts and flash floods for which the coupling processes between land surface and atmosphere play a key role. The aim of this first study is to evaluate the added value of the simulated mean and extreme precipitation in the convection-permitting simulation compared to the coarser resolution simulation for the four seasons (DJF, MAM, JJA, and SON). Experiment is performed as a chain of simulations while the EUR20 simulation is forced by the 6-hourly ERA-Interim initial and lateral boundary conditions (IC-LBCs) and the SWE3 simulation is forced by the 3-hourly EUR20 simulated IC-LBCs. The SPREAD (5 km) and Iberia01 (10 km) high-resolution daily gridded mean precipitation have been used as reference datasets for the validation of the simulated precipitation.

We have not found any consistent improvement in the SWE3 simulation compared to the parent EUR20 simulation for the seasonal mean precipitation of the IP except the spatial variation over mountainous peaks. The analysis shows a lack of mean precipitation in the western and southern parts of the domain in the SWE3 which explains that on average over the whole domain, the spatial-temporal pattern of the observed mean precipitation is quantitatively better represented by the EUR20 than the SWE3 simulation. The added value of kilometer scale simulation over the driving coarser scale simulation is obtained at various indices; in the representation of the spatial-temporal distribution of the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (K-S) distance, wet-day frequency and intensity for each season at both resolutions i.e. downscaled (3km) and upscaled (20km), although the SWE3 simulation slightly underestimates the observed frequency and intensity of the wet-day precipitation. The improvement of finer scale simulation over the coarser resolution simulation has also been found in the spatial-temporal distribution of the heavy precipitation events. It has also been noted that the spatial-temporal distribution of precipitation for all metrics used varies slightly between the two observation datasets for all seasons, and it may be due to the different resolution of both datasets. The absence of sub-daily observed datasets did not allow us to further investigate the added value of the convective permitting simulation at hourly time scales, but we also noticed heavier hourly precipitation and a shift in the diurnal cycle. These results demonstrate a clear advantage of using a RegIPSL model at the kilometric scale over the IP in simulation for high impact weather events, consistently with previous studies over other areas. Further analysis will be done on the hydrological processes in response to these shifts of precipitation distribution between the two simulations.

How to cite: Shahi, N. K., Polcher, J., Bastin, S., Pennel, R., and Fita, L.: Assessment of the spatial variability of the added value on precipitation of convection-permitting simulation over the Iberian Peninsula using the RegIPSL regional earth system model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9062, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9062, 2021.

EGU21-9497 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

When the trigger of deep convection gets tricky in idealized climate simulations

Dominic Matte, Jens H. Christensen, Henrik Fedderson, Rasmus A. Pederson, Henrik Vedel, and Niels Woetmann Nielsen

On the evening on July 2, 2011 a severe cloud burst occurred in the Copenhagen area. During the late afternoon deep moist convection developed over nearby Skåne (the southernmost part of Sweden) in an airstream from east-northeast. In the early evening the DMC passed over Øresund to Copenhagen, where it created a severe flash flood. Between 90 and 135 mm of precipitation in less than 2 hours was recorded ooding cellars, streets, and key roads. The deluge caused 6 billion Danish kroner in damage. Although that such extreme events are rare, the impacts on society is important and should be understood under a warmer climate. Although regional climate models have recently reached the convection permitting resolution, reproducing such events is still challenging.

Several studies suggest that extreme precipitations should increase under a future warmer climate using transient simulation or a pseudo-warming approach. It is still unclear how such event would behave under warmer or colder synoptic conditions. Using a forecast-ensemble method, but keeping a climate perspective, this study assesses the risk rising from such an event under otherwise almost identical, but warmer or colder conditions. With this set-up, we find that the development of the system that resulted in observed downpour exhibit quite a sensitivity to the initial conditions and contrary to a linear thinking, the risk of flooding is decreasing as the climate warms due to the inhibition of the CAPE by the additional lapse-rate anomalies used in this study. We therefore propose that the PGW method should be used with caution and that extreme precipitation events also in transient simulations of future climates need to be studied in detailed to address the limitations to models ability to produce those most extreme and by nature inherently rare events.

How to cite: Matte, D., H. Christensen, J., Fedderson, H., A. Pederson, R., Vedel, H., and Woetmann Nielsen, N.: When the trigger of deep convection gets tricky in idealized climate simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9497, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9497, 2021.

EGU21-9666 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Extreme wind projections over Europe in the high-resolution Euro-CORDEX ensemble

Stefan Sobolowski and Stephen Outten

 

Extreme weather events represent one of the most visible and immediate hazards to society. Many of these types of phenomena are projected to increase in intensity, duration or frequency as the climate warms. Of these extreme winds are among the most damaging historically over Europe yet assessments of their future changes remain fraught with uncertainty. This uncertainty arises due to both the rare nature of extreme wind events and the fact that most model are unable to faithfully represent them. Here we take advantage of a 15-member ensemble of high-resolution Euro-CORDEX simulations (~12km) and investigate projected changes in extreme winds using a peaks-over-threshold approach. Additionally, we show that - despite lingering model deficiencies and inadequate observational coverage - there is clear added value of the higher resolution simulations over coarser resolution counterparts. Further, the spatial heterogeneity and highly localized nature is well captured. Effects such as orographic interactions, drag due to urban areas, and even individual storm tracks over the oceans are clearly visible. As such future changes also exhibit strong spatial heterogeneity. These results emphasize the need for careful case-by-case treatment of extreme wind analysis, especially when done in a climate adaptation or decision-making context. However, for more general assessments the picture is clearer with increases in the return period (i.e., more frequent) extreme episodes projected for Northern, Central and Southern Europe throughout the 21st century. While models continue to improve in their representation of extreme winds, improved observational coverage is desperately needed to better constrain and obtain more robust assessments of future extreme winds over Europe and elsewhere. 

How to cite: Sobolowski, S. and Outten, S.: Extreme wind projections over Europe in the high-resolution Euro-CORDEX ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9666, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9666, 2021.

EGU21-9874 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Comparison of different infiltration schemes in the regional climate model REMO

Daniel Abel, Katrin Ziegler, Felix Pollinger, and Heiko Paeth

The European Regional Development Fund-Project BigData@Geo aims to create highly resolved climate projections for the model region of Lower Franconia in Bavaria, Germany. These projections are analyzed and made available to local stakeholders of agriculture, forestry, and viniculture as well as general public. Since regional climate models’ spatiotemporal resolution often is too coarse to deal with such local issues, the regional climate model REMO is improved within the frame of the project in cooperation with the Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS).

Accurate and highly resolved climate projections require realistic modeling of soil hydrology. Thus, REMO’s original bucket scheme is replaced by a 5-layer soil scheme. It allows for the representation of water below the root zone. Evaporation is possible solely from the top layer instead of the entire bucket and water can flow vertically between the layers. Consequently, the properties and processes change significantly compared to the bucket scheme. Both, the bucket and the 5-layer scheme, use the improved Arno scheme to separate throughfall into infiltration and surface runoff.

In this study, we examine if this scheme is suitable for use with the improved soil hydrology or if other schemes lead to better results. For this, we (1) modify the improved Arno scheme and further introduce the infiltration equations of (2) Philip as well as (3) Green and Ampt. First results of the comparison of these four different schemes and their influence on soil moisture and near-surface atmospheric variables are presented.

How to cite: Abel, D., Ziegler, K., Pollinger, F., and Paeth, H.: Comparison of different infiltration schemes in the regional climate model REMO, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9874, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9874, 2021.

EGU21-10308 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Linkage between the absorbing aerosol snow darkening effects over the Himalayas-Tibetan Plateau and the pre-monsoon climate over northern India

Sushant Das, Erika Coppola, Abhilash Sukumara Panicker, and Alok Sagar Gautam

A large uncertainty exists today in quantifying the absorbing aerosol snow darkening effects, especially at the regional scale. It is considered as one of the main factors contributing to snow melting and glacier retreat over the Himalayas-Tibetan Plateau (HTP). Using International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP)’s regional climate model - RegCM4 coupled with SNow, ICe and Aerosol Radiation (SNICAR) embedded within Community Land Model (CLM4.5), we examine the possible changes induced by aerosol deposition over the HTP and its dynamical impacts over northern India during the pre-monsoon season, which is critical for the inception and development of the monsoon. Sensitivity experiments without (DRE) and with aerosol snow darkening effects (SDDRE) were carried out over the South Asia - Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) domain for the period 2005-2010. It is found that there is a significant reduction of snow fraction by 10 to 25 % and an increase in surface temperatures (> 4° C) in SDDRE, which improves the model performance when comparing against observations. This response is dominated by a larger portion of dust deposition compared to black carbon. The associated increase in the surface and tropospheric temperature over HTP draws in dry air from central and west Asia towards northern India leading to a decrease in the precipitation in SDDRE.  The increase in the northwesterly winds also modulates the dust cycle by enhancing dust emissions over the Thar Desert as well as the columnar burden and depositional fluxes over northern India. As a result of the decrease in precipitation, surface temperature increases and generates a low-pressure system over northern India, which further strengthens the dust transport and partially contributes to the occurrence of dust storms. We also find that the snow darkening effect induces an earlier monsoon onset due to larger temperature gradients initiated over the HTP. Some analysis of precipitation and temperature extremes as well as limitations will be presented. Our study provides evidence that the aerosol snow darkening effects could have substantial impacts over HTP as well as over northern India through feedbacks and hence needs to be considered in climate simulations.

How to cite: Das, S., Coppola, E., Panicker, A. S., and Gautam, A. S.: Linkage between the absorbing aerosol snow darkening effects over the Himalayas-Tibetan Plateau and the pre-monsoon climate over northern India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10308, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10308, 2021.

EGU21-10363 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Extreme winds in a WRF downscaling for the SAM-22 CORDEX domain for the 1979-2018 Historical Period

Natalia Pillar da Silva, Rosmeri Porfírio da Rocha, Natália Machado Crespo, Ricardo de Camargo, Jose Antonio Moreira Lima, Clarisse Lacerda Gomes Kaufmann, and Marcelo Andrioni

This study aims to evaluate how extreme winds (above the 95th percentile) are represented in a downscaling using the regional model WRF over the CORDEX South American domain in an approximate 25 km (0.22 degrees) horizontal resolution, along with CFSR as input. The main focus of the analysis resides over the coastal Brazilian region, given a large number of offshore structures from oil and gas industries subject to impact by severe events. Model results are compared with a reanalysis product (ERA5),  estimates from satellites product (Cross-Calibrated Multi-Platform Wind Speed), and available buoy data (Brazilian National Buoy Project). Downscaling results from WRF show an underestimation of maximum and extreme wind speeds over the region when compared to all references, along with overestimation in the continental areas. This directly impacts results for extreme value estimation for a larger return period and severity evaluation of extreme wind events in future climate projections. To address this, a correction procedure based on the linear relationship between severe wind from satellite and model results is applied. After linearly corrected, the extreme and maximum wind speed values increase and errors in the representation of severe events are reduced in the downscaling results.

How to cite: Silva, N. P. D., Rocha, R. P. D., Crespo, N. M., de Camargo, R., Lima, J. A. M., Kaufmann, C. L. G., and Andrioni, M.: Extreme winds in a WRF downscaling for the SAM-22 CORDEX domain for the 1979-2018 Historical Period, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10363, 2021.

EGU21-10975 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Bias-correction of Surface Wind over Reunion and Mauritius Islands using CORDEX Regional Climate Model: RegCM4.7

Swati Singh, Chao Tang, and Béatrice Morel

The world needs energy for its social and economic development. In the growing population and industrialization, there is an increasing demand for energy worldwide. The fossil fuel resources are still major resources for fulfilling this energy demand though they are responsible for the increased GHG emissions. Renewable energy is an alternative and greener approach towards meeting increasing energy demand. The wind energy is one of the most prominent resources of greener and renewable energy. The islands of Mauritius and Reunion in the southwest Indian Ocean are blessed with wind resources. The wind energy can be used to meet the demand of energy requirement of these two islands by increasing the number of wind turbines. However, energy generation with wind turbines is sensitive to the variability in the surface wind due to climate variability. The surface wind data available is sparse due to limited ground-based observation. The data quality is also affected by instrumental errors, and data is available only for past and present. Regional Climate Models (RCMs) are the main source of climate information for the present and the future. However, simulations from RCMs deal with biases from various sources and therefore need to bias-corrected. Here we use a transfer function based on the method proposed by Li et al. (2010) for the bias-correction of surface wind over Reunion and Mauritius islands. For this purpose, RegCM4.7 RCM from CORDEX AFR22 domain has been chosen for the time period of 1981-2004. The data is interpolated at 9 km resolution and bias-corrected with respect to surface wind data obtained from ERA5 land reanalysis data. The bias-corrected results are validated with the ERA5 land reanalysis data set.

How to cite: Singh, S., Tang, C., and Morel, B.: Bias-correction of Surface Wind over Reunion and Mauritius Islands using CORDEX Regional Climate Model: RegCM4.7, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10975, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10975, 2021.

EGU21-11097 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Contrasting seasonal changes in temperature, precipitation and snow cover simulated over the European Alps during the twentieth century

Martin Ménégoz, Julien Beaumet, Hubert Gallée, Xavier Fettweis, Samuel Morin, Juliette Blanchet, Delphine Six, Christian Vincent, Nicolas C. Jourdain, Bruno Wilhelm, and Sandrine Anquetin

The evolution of temperature, precipitation and snow cover in the European Alps have been simulated with the regional climate model MAR applied with a 7 kilometre horizontal resolution and driven by the ERA-20C (1902-2010) and the ERA5 reanalyses (1981-2018). A comparison with observational datasets, including French and Swiss local meteorological stations, in-situ glacier mass balance measurements and reanalysis product demonstrates high model skill for snow cover duration and snow water equivalent (SWE) as well as for the climatology and the inter-annual variability of both temperature and precipitation. The relatively high resolution allows to estimate the meteorological variables up to 3000m.a.s.l. The vertical gradient of precipitation simulated by MAR over the European Alps reaches 33% km-1 (1.21 mmd-1.km-1) in summer and 38%km-1 (1.15mmd mmd-1.km-1) in winter, on average over 1971–2008 and shows a large spatial variability. This study evidences seasonal and altitudinal contrasts of climate trends over the Alps. A significant (pvalue< 0.05) increase in mean winter precipitation is simulated in the northwestern Alps over 1903–2010, with changes typically reaching 20% to 40% per century, a signal strongly modulated by multi-decadal variability during the second part of the century. A general drying is found in summer over the same period, exceeding 20% to 30% per century in the western plains and 40% to 50% per century in the southern plains surrounding the Alps but remaining smaller (<10%) and not significant above 1500ma.s.l. Over 1903–2010, the maximum of daily precipitation (Rx1day) shows a general and significant increase at the annual timescale and also during the four seasons, reaching local values between 20% and 40% per century over large parts of the Alps and the Apennines. Trends of Rx1day are significant (pvalue<0.05) only when considering long time series, typically 50 to 80 years depending on the area considered. Some of these trends are nonetheless significant when computed over 1970–2010, suggesting a recent acceleration of the increase in extreme precipitation. Rx1day increase occurs where the annual correlation between temperature and intense precipitation is high. The highest warming rates in MAR are found at low elevations (< 1000 m a.s.l) in winter, whereas they are found at high elevations (> 2000 m a.s.l) in summer. In spring, warming trends show a maximum at intermediate elevations (1500 m to 1800 m). Our results suggest that higher warming at these elevations is mostly linked with the snow-albedo feedback in spring and summer.

How to cite: Ménégoz, M., Beaumet, J., Gallée, H., Fettweis, X., Morin, S., Blanchet, J., Six, D., Vincent, C., Jourdain, N. C., Wilhelm, B., and Anquetin, S.: Contrasting seasonal changes in temperature, precipitation and snow cover simulated over the European Alps during the twentieth century, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11097, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11097, 2021.

EGU21-11138 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1 | Highlight

The Climate Response of Heavy Precipitation Events over the Alps and in the Mediterranean

Sebastian Müller, Emanuela Pichelli, Erika Coppola, Segolene Berthou, Susanne Brienen, Cécile Caillaud, Andreas Dobler, and Merja Tölle

We here present a climate study on Heavy Precipitation Events (HPEs). To this aim we use an ensemble of convection-permitting regional climate models on a domain that covers the alps and large parts of the Mediterranean. These HPEs are generally meso-scale convective systems, which often are related to a landfall or orographic blocking. For society they are of major interest as they may damage infrastructure and threaten lives through flash floods and strong winds.

From the models' output of precipitation we identify HPEs by applying an well-established clustering and tracking algorithm (MET MTD).

Our study is organized into an evaluation and a climate study part. We evaluate the models by comparison of the evaluation scenario, driven by reanalysis data, against observations. In order to evaluate the tracking algorithm we analyse three specific historic events, occurring in southern France, central Italy and Germany. Eventually we investigate the climate response by comparison of the far future projection (2090-2100) under the rcp85 forcing against the historical scenario (1996-2006).

In regards of the model evaluation we find that the annual cycle is very well captured by model ensemble, although the models overestimate HPEs over orography and underestimated HPEs over flatter terrain.

Concerning the climate response our main result highlights that precipitation associated with HPEs is increasing in the far future, even though total annual precipitation is decreasing. Overall more HPEs occur in the far future, but only for an extended winter season (October to April), while for months May to September the occurrence of HPEs is decreasing. This behaviour motivates us to investigate the annual cycle of HPEs in greater detail.

How to cite: Müller, S., Pichelli, E., Coppola, E., Berthou, S., Brienen, S., Caillaud, C., Dobler, A., and Tölle, M.: The Climate Response of Heavy Precipitation Events over the Alps and in the Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11138, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11138, 2021.

EGU21-11746 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Explosive Cyclones in the CORDEX-CORE projections for Southern Hemisphere domains

Michelle Reboita, Natália Machado Crespo, Marco Reale, José Abraham Torres, and Rosmeri Porfírio da Rocha

Explosive cyclones (ECs) are extratropical systems, often associated with extreme events,  which experience a fast deepening (~24 hPa/24 h) over a relatively short time range. Here, we analyze changes in the austral winter characteristics of ECs in three domains (Africa-AFR, Australia-AUS and South America-SAM) as projected by Regional Climate Model (RegCM4) under RCP8.5 emission scenario in the CORDEX-CORE framework. RegCM4 was nested in three global climate models (GCMs) from CMIP5 (HadGEM2-ES, MPI-ESM-MR and NorESM-1M) and executed with 25 km of grid spacing. The cyclone database was obtained with the application of an automatic detection and tracking scheme to the 6-hourly mean sea level pressure fields. Extratropical cyclones with explosive features are then selected using the Sanders and Gyakum criterium. Following IPCC recommendation, we analyze the reference 1995–2014 period and the end-of-century 2080–2099 period. ECs represent ~13-17% of the total number of cyclones in ERA-Interim reanalysis during the austral winter, while the simulation ensembles, in general, underestimate this value. While in the AFR domain GCMs ensemble represents better the percentage of ECs compared to ERA-Interim, in AUS and SAM domains RegCM4 has a better performance than GCMs. The percentage of ECs compared to the  total number of cyclones in each domain is projected to increase, with higher positive trends for the SAM domain (7.4% in GCMs and 5.6% in RegCM4) than  AFR (3.3% in GCMs and 3.9% in RegCM4) and AUS (3.9% in GCMs and 1.7% in RegCM4). Compared to the present climate, ECs in the future will be stronger and faster but with a shorter lifetime.

How to cite: Reboita, M., Machado Crespo, N., Reale, M., Torres, J. A., and Porfírio da Rocha, R.: Explosive Cyclones in the CORDEX-CORE projections for Southern Hemisphere domains, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11746, 2021.

Urban areas are prone to climate change impacts. A transition towards sustainable and climate-resilient urban areas is relying heavily on useful, evidence-based climate information on urban scales. However, current climate data and information produced by urban or climate models are either not scale compliant for cities, or do not cover essential parameters and/or urban-rural interactions under climate change conditions. Furthermore, although e.g. the urban heat island may be better understood, other phenomena, such as moisture change, are little researched. Our research shows the potential of regional climate models, within the EURO-CORDEX framework, to provide climate projections and information on urban scales for 11km and 3km grid size. The city of Berlin is taken as a case-study. The results on the 11km spatial scale show that the regional climate models simulate a distinct difference between Berlin and its surroundings for temperature and humidity related variables. There is an increase in urban dry island conditions in Berlin towards the end of the 21st century. To gain a more detailed understanding of climate change impacts, extreme weather conditions were investigated under a 2°C global warming and further downscaled to the 3km scale. This enables the exploration of differences of the meteorological processes between the 11km and 3km scales, and the implications for urban areas and its surroundings. The overall study shows the potential of regional climate models to provide climate change information on urban scales.

How to cite: Langendijk, G. S., Rechid, D., and Jacob, D.: Future humidity extremes in an urban-rural context - using regional climate model projections down to convection permitting scales for Berlin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12054, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12054, 2021.

EGU21-15797 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Land-atmosphere coupling during compound extreme heat and drought events in the LUCAS experiment: a new coupling metric for climate extremes

Rita M. Cardoso, Daniela D. C. A. Lima, Pedro M. M. Soares, Diana Rechid, Marcus Breil, Erika Coppola, Edouard Davin, Peter Hoffmann, Lisa Jach, Eleni Katragkou Katragkou, Ronny Meier, Priscilla A. Mooney, Natalie de Noblet-Ducoudré, Hans-Juergen Panitz, Ioannis Sofiadis, Susanna Strada, Gustav Strandberg, Merja Tölle, and Kirsten Warrach-Sagi

Land-atmosphere energy and water exchanges are fundamentally linked to soil-moisture. The distribution of the planets’ biomes hinges on the surface-atmosphere coupling since soil moisture and temperature feedbacks have a strong influence on plant transpiration and photosynthesis. Land use/land cover changes (LUC) modify locally land surface properties that control the land-atmosphere mass, energy, and momentum exchanges. The impact of these changes depends on the scale and nature of land cover modifications and is very difficult to quantify. However, large inconsistencies in the LUC impacts are observed between models, highlighting the need for common LUC across a large ensemble of models. The Flagship Pilot Study LUCAS (Land Use & Climate Across Scales) provides a coordinated effort to study LUC using an ensemble of regional climate models (RCMs). In the first phase of the project 3 experiments were performed for continental Europe: EVAL (current climate); GRASS (trees replaced by grassland) and FOREST (grasses and shrubs replaced by trees).  An analysis of the energy and moisture balance for the three experiments is performed, focusing on the relationship between the fluxes partitioning, heat waves and droughts. To better asses the link between extreme temperatures and soil moisture or evapotranspiration, a new coupling metric for short time scales is proposed, the Latent Heat Flux-Temperature Coupling Magnitude (LETCM). This new metric is computed for a specific period, considering the positive temperature extremes and the negative latent heat flux extremes. Areas with positive magnitude values imply higher temperature anomaly, due to a negative latent heat flux anomaly. This new metric only considers periods of strong coupling, with positive signals in areas of high temperatures and evaporative stress, allowing for the detection of events that are extreme for energy and water cycle. Concurrently, a new decile based normalised drought index is used to examine the concurrent heat extremes and droughts. The analysis focuses on the three experiments revealing that the number, amplitude and spatial distribution of compound extreme heat and drought is highly model dependant. The impact of afforestation or deforestation is not consistent across models.

Acknowledgements

 The authors wish to acknowledge project LEADING (PTDC/CTA-MET/28914/2017) and FCT - project UIDB/50019/2020 - Instituto Dom Luiz.

How to cite: Cardoso, R. M., Lima, D. D. C. A., Soares, P. M. M., Rechid, D., Breil, M., Coppola, E., Davin, E., Hoffmann, P., Jach, L., Katragkou, E. K., Meier, R., Mooney, P. A., de Noblet-Ducoudré, N., Panitz, H.-J., Sofiadis, I., Strada, S., Strandberg, G., Tölle, M., and Warrach-Sagi, K.: Land-atmosphere coupling during compound extreme heat and drought events in the LUCAS experiment: a new coupling metric for climate extremes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15797, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15797, 2021.

EGU21-12336 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1 | Highlight

Climate Change Explorer: Extracting localized data for developing Climate Services

Christine Nam, Bente Tiedje, Susanne Pfeifer, Diana Rechid, and Daniel Eggert

Everyone, politicians, public administrations, business owners, and citizens want to know how climate changes will affect them locally. Having such knowledge offers everyone the opportunity to make informed choices and take action towards mitigation and adaptation.

 

In order to develop locally relevant climate service products and climate advisory services, as we do at GERICS, we must extract localized climate change information from Regional Climate Model ensemble simulations.

 

Common challenges associated with developing such services include the transformation of petabytes of data from physical quantities such as precipitation, temperature, or wind, into user-applicable quantities such as return periods of heavy precipitation, e.g. for legislative or construction design frequency. Other challenges include the technical and physical barriers in the use and interpretation of climate data, due to large data volume, unfamiliar software and data formats, or limited technical infrastructure. The interpretation of climate data also requires scientific background knowledge, which limit or influence the interpretation of results.

 

These barriers hinder the efficient and effective transformation of big data into user relevant information in a timely and reliable manner. To enable our society to adapt and become more resilient to climate change, we must overcome these barriers. In the Helmholtz funded Digital Earth project we are tackling these challenges by developing a Climate Change Workflow.

 

In the scope of this Workflow, the user can easily define a region of interest and extract the relevant climate data from the simulations available at the Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF). Following which, a general overview of the projected changes, in precipitation for example, for multiple climate projections is presented. It conveys the bandwidth, i.e. the minimum/maximum range by an ensemble of regional climate model projections. We implemented the sketched workflow in a web-based tool called The Climate Change Explorer. It addresses barriers associated with extracting locally relevant climate data from petabytes of data, in unfamilar data formats, and deals with interpolation issues, using a more intuitive and user-friendly web interface.

 

Ultimately, the Climate Change Explorer provides concise information on the magnitude of projected climate change and the range of these changes for individually defined regions, such as found in GERICS ‘Climate Fact Sheets’. This tool has the capacity to also improve other workflows of climate services, allowing them to dedicate more time in deriving user relevant climate indicies; enabling politicians, public administrations, and businesses to take action.

How to cite: Nam, C., Tiedje, B., Pfeifer, S., Rechid, D., and Eggert, D.: Climate Change Explorer: Extracting localized data for developing Climate Services, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12336, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12336, 2021.

EGU21-12531 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Representation of the Angolan low and Southern African Summer Precipitation in the CORDEX and CMIP5 models. 

Sabina Abba-Omar, Francesca Raffaele, Erika Coppola, Daniela Jacob, Claas Teichmann, and Armelle Remedio

The impact of climate change on precipitation over Southern Africa is of particular interest due to its possible devastating societal impacts. To add to this, simulating precipitation is challenging and models tend to show strong biases over this region, especially during the Austral Summer (DJF) months. One of the reasons for this is the mis-representation of the Angolan Low (AL) and its influence on Southern Africa’s Summer precipitation in the models. Therefore, this study aims to explore and compare different models’ ability to capture the AL and its link to precipitation variability as well as consider the impact climate change may have on this link. We also explore how the interaction between ENSO, another important mode of variability for precipitation, and the Angolan Low, impact precipitation, how the models simulate this and whether this could change in the future under climate change. 

We computed the position and strength of the AL in reanalysis data and compared these results to three different model ensembles with varying resolutions. Namely, the CORDEX-CORE ensemble (CCORE), a new phase of CORDEX simulations with higher resolutions (0.22 degrees), the lower resolution (0.44 degrees) CORDEX-phase 1 ensemble (C44) and the CMIP5 models that drive the two RCM ensembles. We also used Self Organizing Maps to group DJF yearly anomaly patterns and identify which combination of ENSO and AL strength scenarios are responsible for particularly wet or dry conditions. Regression analysis was performed to analyze the relationships between precipitation and the AL and ENSO. This analysis was repeated for near (2041-2060) and far (2080-2099) future climate and compared with the present to understand how the strength of the AL, and its connection to precipitation variability and ENSO, changes in the future. 

We found that, in line with previous studies, models with stronger AL tend to produce more rainfall. CCORE tends to simulate a stronger AL than C44 and therefore, higher precipitation biases. However, the regression analysis shows us that CCORE is able to capture the relationship between precipitation and the AL strength variability as well as ENSO better than the other ensembles. We found that generally dry rainfall patterns over Southern Africa are associated with a weak AL and El Nino event whereas wet rainfall patterns occur during a strong AL and La Nina year. While the models are able to capture this, they also tend to show more neutral ENSO conditions associated with these wet and dry patterns which possibly indicates less of a connection between AL strength and ENSO than seen in the observed results. Analysis of the future results indicates that the AL weakens, this is shown across all the ensembles and could be a contributing factor to some of the drying seen. These results have applications in understanding and improving model representation of precipitation over Southern Africa as well as providing some insight into the impact of climate change on precipitation and some of its associated dynamics over this region.

How to cite: Abba-Omar, S., Raffaele, F., Coppola, E., Jacob, D., Teichmann, C., and Remedio, A.: Representation of the Angolan low and Southern African Summer Precipitation in the CORDEX and CMIP5 models. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12531, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12531, 2021.

EGU21-12545 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Regional paleoclimate in the EMME and the Nile basin based on COSMO-CLM with orbital and volcanic forcing at the different spatial resolution

Mingyue Zhang, Eva Hartmann, Elena Xoplaki, and Sebastian Wagner

The interaction between climate variability, extreme events and societies in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East (EMME) and the Nile river basin is of particular interest in the last 2000 years. Major civilizations and complex pre-modern societies have written the greatest and multifaceted history of the area. However, the influence of climate on the societies is examined only from the proxy records perspective, without the detail of the processes that offer regional climate model simulations. The present and future climate and climate variability of this region are currently studied in the frame of the MENA CORDEX program with different global and regional climate models. For the past climate, exist only global climate or earth system model simulations with a coarse spatial resolution with a minimum of 100 km horizontal resolution. We aim at improving our understanding of past climate in the EMME and the Nile river basin (Nile) at the regional scale and use an adjusted paleoclimate version of the COSMO-CLM. Test simulations have been performed over the study region for the years 2017-2018 to identify the best settings of CCLM with respect to the CORDEX-MENA simulations which are carried out by Bucchignani et al. (2016). Test simulations show the CCLM can correctly simulate large tropical volcanic eruptions, as conditions similar to the Tambora eruption by adapting the stratospheric aerosol optical depth (AOD) mimicking conditions after a Tambora-like volcanic eruption. In agreement with Bucchignani et al. (2016), the albedo and aerosols parameters are found to be most important for the area and may be responsible for larger deviations compared to observational data.  Thus, CCLM climate modelling for the present (1979-2019) and selected paleo-periods (525-575 CE and 1220-1290 CE) with intense volcanic activity will be forced by the MPI-ESM-LR ‘past2k’ simulation with the optimized settings which is identified in the test simulations. Orbital, solar and volcanic forcing, together with vegetation, land-use changes and greenhouse gas changes will be addressed step by step in the CCLM with resolutions of 0.44° and 0.11°.  The present-day simulations show that the temperature and precipitation are well simulated compare to reanalysis and observational data in general. Additional, CCLM correctly captured convection and cloud cover clearly define the model performance in the greater southern areas of the domain that are affected by the tropical convection. Further, the orography and the land-sea interaction seem to significantly influence the local climate and may lead to differences compared to observations, which may also be strongly connected with the specific spatial resolution. For example, the Ethiopian Highlands and the East African Plateau have high elevations and have a large impact on the regional climate.

 Reference

Bucchignani, E., Cattaneo, L., Panitz, HJ. et al. Sensitivity analysis with the regional climate model COSMO-CLM over the CORDEX-MENA domain. Meteorol Atmos Phys 128, 73–95 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00703-015-0403-3

How to cite: Zhang, M., Hartmann, E., Xoplaki, E., and Wagner, S.: Regional paleoclimate in the EMME and the Nile basin based on COSMO-CLM with orbital and volcanic forcing at the different spatial resolution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12545, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12545, 2021.

Southern South America (SSA) is a wide populated region exposed to extreme rainfall events, which are recognised as some of the major threats in a warming climate. These events produce large impacts on socio-economic activities, energy demand and health systems. Hence, studying this phenomena requires high-quality and high-resolution observational data and model simulations. In this work, the main features of daily extreme precipitation and circulation types over SSA were evaluated using a 4-model set of CORDEX regional climate models (RCMs) driven by ERA-Interim during 1980-2010: RCA4 and WRF from CORDEX Phase 1 and RegCM4v7 and REMO2015 from the brand-new CORDEX-CORE simulations. Observational uncertainty was assessed by comparing model outputs with multiple observational datasets (rain gauges, CHIRPS, CPC and MSWEP). 

The inter-comparison of extreme events, characterized in terms of their intensity, frequency and spatial coverage, varied across SSA exhibiting large differences among observational datasets and RCMs, pointing out the current observational uncertainty when evaluating precipitation extremes, particularly at a daily scale. The spread between observational datasets was smaller than for the RCMs. Most of the RCMs successfully captured the spatial pattern of extreme rainfall across SSA, reproducing the maximum intensities in southeastern South America (SESA) and central and southern Chile during the austral warm (October to March) and cold (April to September) seasons, respectively. However, they often presented overestimations over central and southern Chile, and more variable results in SESA. RegCM4 and WRF seemed to well represent the maximum precipitation amounts over SESA, while REMO showed strong overestimations and RCA4 had more difficulties in representing the spatial distribution of heavy rainfall intensities. Focusing over SESA, differences were detected in the timing and location of extremes (including the areal coverage) among both observational datasets and RCMs, which poses a particular challenge when performing impact studies in the region. Thus, stressing that the use of multiple datasets is of key importance when carrying out regional climate studies and model evaluations, particularly for extremes. 

The synoptic environment was described by a classification of circulation types (CTs) using Self-Organizing Maps (SOM) considering geopotential height anomalies at 500 hPa (Z500). Specific CTs were identified as they significantly enhanced the occurrence of extreme rainfall events in sectorized areas of SESA. In particular, a dipolar structure of Z500 anomalies that produced a marked trough at the mid-level atmosphere, usually located east of the Andes, significantly favoured the occurrence of extreme precipitation events in the warm season. The RCMs were able to adequately reproduce the SOM frequencies, although simplifying the predominant CTs into a reduced number of configurations. They appropriately reproduced the observed extreme precipitation frequencies conditioned by the CTs and their atmospheric configurations, but exhibiting some limitations in the location and intensity of the resulting precipitation systems.

In this sense, continuous evaluations of observational datasets and model simulations become necessary for a better understanding of the physical mechanisms behind extreme precipitation over the region, as well as for its past and future changes in a climate change scenario.

How to cite: Olmo, M. E. and Bettolli, M. L.: Precipitation extremes over southern South America and their synoptic environment in a set of CORDEX regional climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12582, 2021.

EGU21-12605 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

A hemispheric-wide performance assessment of the CMIP models based on recurrent atmospheric circulation patterns for use in regional climate studies

Swen Brands

EGU21-13131 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

ENSO teleconnections in an ensemble of CORDEX-CORE regional simulations

Abraham Torres-Alavez, Fred Kucharski, Erika Coppola, and Lorena Castro

Using high-spatial-resolution regional simulations from the global program, Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment-Coordinated Output for Regional Evaluations (CORDEX-CORE), we examine the capability of regional climate models (RCMs) to represent the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) precipitation and surface air temperature teleconnections during boreal winter (December-February). This study uses CORDEX-CORE simulations for the period 1975-2004 with two RCMs, the RegCM4 and REMO, driven by three General Circulation Models (GCMs) from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project (CMIP5). The RCM simulations were run at a 25-km grid spacing over Africa, Central and North America, South Asia and South America.

The teleconnection patterns are calculated in the reanalysis data (observations), and these results are compared to those of the ensemble and individual simulations of both the GCM and RCM. Linear regression is used to calculate the teleconnection patterns and a permutation test is applied to calculate the statistical significance of the regression coefficients. Results show that overall, the ENSO signal from the GCMs is preserved in the ensemble and the individual RCM simulations over most of the regions analyzed. These reproduced most of the observed regional responses to ENSO forcing and showing teleconnection signals statistically significant at the 95% level. Furthermore, in some cases, the ensemble and individual simulations of RCMs improve the spatial pattern and the amplitude of the ENSO precipitation response of the GCMs, particularly over southern Africa, the Arabian-Asian region, and the region composed of Mexico and the southern United States. These results show the potential value of the GCM-RCM downscaling systems not only in the context of climate change research but also for seasonal to annual prediction.

How to cite: Torres-Alavez, A., Kucharski, F., Coppola, E., and Castro, L.: ENSO teleconnections in an ensemble of CORDEX-CORE regional simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13131, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13131, 2021.

EGU21-14082 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Emergence of projected scaled patterns of extreme weather events over Europe

Tugba Ozturk, Dominic Matte, and Jens Hesselbjerg Christensen

EGU21-14345 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Sensitivity of wind and soil moisture to the land surface component in 30-year continuous simulations over the Iberian Peninsula

Elena García-Bustamante, J. Fidel González-Rouco, Jorge Navarro, Ana Palomares Losada, Almudena García-García, Francisco José Cuesta-Valero, and Hugo Beltrami

During the last three decades significant trends compatible with a changing climate due to increased anthropogenic emissions have been observed. Changes are remarkable not only at global but also at regional scales. The Euro-Mediterranean sector has been identified as one of the hot spots potentially subject to critical impacts of climate change already manifest. In this work several long continuous (non re-initialized) WRF simulations at a high resolution (9 km) over peninsular Iberia that make use of a set of different land surface schemes have been performed. In doing so we categorize the impact of using alternate land surface models in long (30 years) continuous simulations since only such running approach allows to preserve the memory of the soil processes. Thus, we explore changes in the soil moisture content aiming at the detection of plausible evidences of drying trends, specially for the south of Spain. In addition we investigate a 30-year climatology of wind speed in the search of a potential stilling phenomenon already documented over several European and worldwide regions.

How to cite: García-Bustamante, E., González-Rouco, J. F., Navarro, J., Palomares Losada, A., García-García, A., Cuesta-Valero, F. J., and Beltrami, H.: Sensitivity of wind and soil moisture to the land surface component in 30-year continuous simulations over the Iberian Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14345, 2021.

In this study, we evaluate a set of high-resolution (25–50 km horizontal grid spacing) global climate models (GCMs) from the High-Resolution Model Intercomparison Project (HighResMIP), developed as part of the EU-funded PRIMAVERA (Process-based climate simulation: Advances in high resolution modelling and European climate risk assessment) project, and from the EURO-CORDEX (Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment) regional climate models (RCMs) (12–50 km horizontal grid spacing) over a European domain. It is the first time that an assessment of regional climate information using ensembles of both GCMs and RCMs at similar horizontal resolutions has been possible. The focus of the evaluation is on the distribution of daily precipitation at a 50 km scale under current climate conditions. Both the GCM and RCM ensembles are evaluated against high-quality gridded observations in terms of spatial resolution and station density. We show that both ensembles outperform GCMs from the 5th Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5), which cannot capture the regional-scale precipitation distribution properly because of their coarse resolutions. PRIMAVERA GCMs generally simulate precipitation distributions within the range of EURO-CORDEX RCMs. Both ensembles perform better in summer and autumn in most European regions but tend to overestimate precipitation in winter and spring. PRIMAVERA shows improvements in the latter by reducing moderate-precipitation rate biases over central and western Europe. The spatial distribution of mean precipitation is also improved in PRIMAVERA. Finally, heavy precipitation simulated by PRIMAVERA agrees better with observations in most regions and seasons, while CORDEX overestimates precipitation extremes. However, uncertainty exists in the observations due to a potential undercatch error, especially during heavy-precipitation events.

The analyses also confirm previous findings that, although the spatial representation of precipitation is improved, the effect of increasing resolution from 50 to 12 km horizontal grid spacing in EURO-CORDEX daily precipitation distributions is, in comparison, small in most regions and seasons outside mountainous regions and coastal regions. Our results show that both high-resolution GCMs and CORDEX RCMs provide adequate information to end users at a 50 km scale.

How to cite: Demory, M.-E. and Berthou, S. and the PRIMAVERA and EURO-CORDEX co-authors: European daily precipitation according to EURO-CORDEX regional climate models (RCMs) and high-resolution global climate models (GCMs) from the High-Resolution Model Intercomparison Project (HighResMIP), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14363, 2021.

EGU21-14967 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Generating long-term high-resolution land-use change datasets for regional climate modeling in CORDEX domains

Peter Hoffmann, Diana Rechid, Vanessa Reinhart, Christina Asmus, Edouard L. Davin, Eleni Katragkou, Nathalie de Noblet-Ducoudré, Jürgen Böhner, and Benjamin Bechtel

Land-use and land cover (LULC) are continuously changing due to environmental changes and anthropogenic activities. Many observational and modeling studies show that LULC changes are important drivers altering land surface feedbacks and land-atmosphere exchange processes that have substantial impact on climate on the regional and local scale. Yet, most long-term regional climate modeling studies do not account for these changes. Therefore, within the WCRP CORDEX Flagship Pilot Study LUCAS (Land Use Change Across Scales) a new workflow was developed to generate high-resolution annual land cover change time series based on past reconstructions and future projections. First, the high-resolution global land cover dataset ESA-CCI LC (~300 m resolution) is aggregated and converted to a 0.1° resolution, fractional plant functional type (PFT) dataset. Second, the land use change information from the land-use harmonized dataset (LUH2), provided at 0.25° resolution as input for CMIP6 experiments, is translated into PFT changes employing a newly developed land use translator (LUT). The new LUT was first applied to the EURO-CORDEX domain. The resulting LULC maps for past and future - the LUCAS LUC dataset - can be applied as land use forcing to the next generation RCM simulations for downscaling CMIP6 by the EURO-CORDEX community and in the framework of FPS LUCAS. The dataset includes land cover and land management practices changes important for the regional and local scale such as urbanization and irrigation. The LUCAS LUC workflow is applied to further CORDEX domains, such as Australasia and North America. The resulting past and future land cover changes will be presented, and challenges regarding the application of the new workflow to different regions will be addressed. In addition, issues related to the implementation of the dataset into different RCMs will be discussed.

How to cite: Hoffmann, P., Rechid, D., Reinhart, V., Asmus, C., Davin, E. L., Katragkou, E., de Noblet-Ducoudré, N., Böhner, J., and Bechtel, B.: Generating long-term high-resolution land-use change datasets for regional climate modeling in CORDEX domains, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14967, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14967, 2021.

EGU21-15663 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Response of the surface climate to different land surface models: WRF sensitivity to surface model options

Daniela C.A. Lima, Rita M. Cardoso, and Pedro M.M. Soares

The Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model version 4.2 includes different land surface schemes, allowing a better representation of the land surface processes. Four simulations with the WRF model differing in land surface models and options were investigated as a sensitivity study over the European domain. These experiments span from 2004-2006 with a one-month spin-up and were performed at 0.11o horizontal resolution with 50 vertical levels, following the CORDEX guidelines. The lateral boundary conditions were driven by ERA5 reanalysis from European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. For the first experiment, the Noah land surface model was used. For the remaining simulations, the Noah-MP (multi-physics) land surface model was used with different runoff and groundwater options: (1) original surface and subsurface runoff (free drainage), (2) TOPMODEL with groundwater and (3) Miguez-Macho & Fan groundwater scheme. The physical parameterizations options are the same for all simulations. These experiments allow the analysis of the sensitivity of different land surface options and to understand how the representation of land surface processes impacts on the atmosphere properties. This study focusses on the investigation of land-atmosphere feedbacks trough the analysis of the soil moisture – temperature and soil moisture – precipitation interactions, latent and sensible heat fluxes, and moisture fluxes. The influence of different surface model options on atmospheric boundary layer is also explored.

Acknowledgements. The authors wish to acknowledge the LEADING (PTDC/CTA-MET/28914/2017) project funded by FCT. The authors would like to acknowledge the financial support FCT through project UIDB/50019/2020 – Instituto Dom Luiz.

How to cite: Lima, D. C. A., Cardoso, R. M., and Soares, P. M. M.: Response of the surface climate to different land surface models: WRF sensitivity to surface model options, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15663, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15663, 2021.

EGU21-15990 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Impact of Horizontal Resolution on Indian Summer Monsoon in coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Regional Model over CORDEX-SA

Pankaj Kumar, Alok Kumar Mishra, Aditya Kumar Dubey, Md. Saquib Saharwardi, and Dimitry Sein

The correct representation of air-sea coupling is crucial towards improving the Indian summer monsoon. In this study, a coupled atmosphere-ocean regional model ROM is employed to investigate the impact of horizontal resolution (0.440 and 0.220) in simulating the mean Indian summer monsoon characteristics and associated dynamical and thermodynamical processes. Regional model, REMO, and global ocean model, MPIOM is taken as atmospheric and ocean components of the coupled system. Interestingly, ROM at both resolutions performs well in simulating the mean monsoonal characteristics. However, increasing horizontal resolution from 0.440 to 0.220 adds value in simulating the JJAS mean precipitation by reducing the biases both over ocean and land. The detailed results from the analysis will be discussed in the general assembly.

Keywords: Indian summer monsoon, coupled regional model, horizontal-resolution, CORDEX-SA

 

Acknowledgement: This work is jointly supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Govt. of India, grant number DST/INT/RUS/RSF/P-33/G and the Russian Science Foundation (Project No.: 19-47-02015).

How to cite: Kumar, P., Mishra, A. K., Dubey, A. K., Saharwardi, Md. S., and Sein, D.: Impact of Horizontal Resolution on Indian Summer Monsoon in coupled Atmosphere-Ocean Regional Model over CORDEX-SA, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15990, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15990, 2021.

EGU21-16115 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Evolution of extreme hot temperatures over Euro-Mediterranean main airports 

Victoria Gallardo, Emilia Sanchez-Gomez, and Eleonore Riber

As a result of global warming, the magnitude and the frequency of extreme hot temperature events have increased remarkably in the recent decades. In the absence of policies, global warming is expected to continue during the next years, and certain regions which are already characterized by warm and hot temperatures, such as the Euro-Mediterranean region, may be notably impacted in numerous and diverse fields. The aeronautical sector is among these vulnerable fields, as aircraft takeoff performances also depend on air temperature. For instance, an increase in ground temperature results in a decrease in air density, and consequently in the available thrust for takeoff. This may lead to flight delays, weight restrictions or even flight cancellations. Concerning the aircraft engines, an increase in temperature may negatively impact the performance and may also lead to an increase of pollutant emissions into the atmosphere. All of these effects would have a social, economic and health impact.

In this study we analyze the evolution of extreme hot temperatures on aircraft performance over the main airports in the Southern Euro-Mediterranean region, using simulations performed by regional climate models (RCMs) from the Euro-CORDEX international exercise. To this end, we first evaluate RCMs in terms of their representation of extreme hot temperatures and their trends in the present period by comparing to different observational datasets and also to the driving GCMs. The results of this comparison show that RCMs don't represent better the amplitude nor the temporal trends of hot temperature events in summer, despide their higher spatial resolution. We assess the changes in the hot temperature extremes from the Euro-CORDEX future projections and we evaluate the risk of weight restriction in the next decades.

How to cite: Gallardo, V., Sanchez-Gomez, E., and Riber, E.: Evolution of extreme hot temperatures over Euro-Mediterranean main airports , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16115, 2021.

EGU21-16153 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.1

Radiation and wind projections for Poland based on downscaled EuroCORDEX ensemble

Joanna Struzewska, Maciej Jefimow, Aneta Gienibor, Maria Kleczek, Anahita Sattari, Malgorzata Zdunek, Aleksander Norowski, and Bartlomiej Walczak

Forecasted trends of solar radiation and wind speed serve as an input for climate risk assessment as well as the estimation of renewable energy potential in the future climate.

In the frame of the project “Adaption strategies to Climate Change in Poland” the projections of solar radiation and the wind speed were developed based on the EURO-CORDEX. The RCM results for an area covering central Europe with a resolution of 0.11 ° (approx. 12.5 km) were used. The analyses were carried out for RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios.

 

To represent better the local variability the statistical downscaling was applied based on various historical gridded datasets (ERA5 and IMWM for the wind speed and ERA5, IMWM, and SARAH-II for the shortwave solar radiation). Ensemble analyses were undertaken to assess the projection uncertainty.

Solar radiation in the future climate shows a slight downward trend. The annual sum of solar radiation at the end of the century will decrease by 12 kWh/m2 to 40 kWh/m2, depending on the scenario. The most significant change will occur in eastern and north-eastern Poland. Forecasts of average wind speed values do not indicate significant changes in the 21st century, although the wind speed distribution showed changes in individual months - an increase in the winter and a decrease in the summer months.

Results are available via the interactive climate web portal https://klimada2.ios.gov.pl/klimat-scenariusze-portal/.

How to cite: Struzewska, J., Jefimow, M., Gienibor, A., Kleczek, M., Sattari, A., Zdunek, M., Norowski, A., and Walczak, B.: Radiation and wind projections for Poland based on downscaled EuroCORDEX ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16153, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16153, 2021.

CL3.1.2 – Reducing uncertainty in regional climate responses to anthropogenic aerosol emissions

EGU21-6885 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Developing emulators of regional climate responses to regional aerosol perturbations using three coupled chemistry-climate models

Daniel Westervelt, Arlene Fiore, Drew Shindell, and Jean-François Lamarque

The climatic implications of regional aerosol and precursor emissions reductions implemented to protect human health are poorly understood. However, quantitative estimates of climate responses to emission perturbations are needed by the climate assessment and impacts community. To address this need, we investigate the global and regional mean climate response to regional changes in aerosol emissions using three coupled chemistry-climate models: NOAA GFDL-CM3, NCAR-CESM1, and NASA GISS-E2. Our approach contrasts a long present-day control simulation from each model (up to 400 years with perpetual year 2000 or 2005 emissions) with fourteen individual aerosol emissions perturbation simulations (160-240 years each). We perturb emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and/or carbonaceous aerosol within six world regions and assess the statistical significance of temperature and precipitation responses relative to internal variability determined by the control simulation and across the models. Using the three models and their statistical significance as an indicator of robustness of climate responses to aerosols, we develop emulators of the climate response to changes in aerosol emissions. Emulators are defined as the change in a climatic variable (e.g. temperature) in a region i normalized by the change in emissions and/or radiative forcing for species S in region j, i.e. dTi/dEj,S, where T is temperature and E is emissions. In all models, the emulators for global mean surface temperature response (perturbation minus control) to aerosol is positive (warming). Results also indicate that the Arctic is the most sensitive region to nonlocal aerosol emissions or forcing, as the emulators are largest for the Arctic. Emulator calculations indicate a robust regional response to aerosol emissions or forcing within the northern hemisphere mid-latitudes, regardless of where the aerosol forcing is located longitudinally. We assess the utility of our emulators by applying them to an ensemble of historical and future CESM simulations in which anthropogenic aerosol emissions are removed to isolate the climate response to aerosols. We find good agreement between the ensemble mean temperature response to aerosols as simulated by CESM and the reconstructed temperature response from the emissions-based emulators and the emissions input to CESM.  This work is a first step towards providing statistical relationships between the changes in regional aerosol emissions and the statistically significant changes in climate that can be attributed to them. Such relationships would allow for the generation of regional climate change scenarios without having to simulate computationally demanding chemistry-climate models.

How to cite: Westervelt, D., Fiore, A., Shindell, D., and Lamarque, J.-F.: Developing emulators of regional climate responses to regional aerosol perturbations using three coupled chemistry-climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6885, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6885, 2021.

The global mean surface temperature went through a cooling period during the mid-20th century despite the continuous increase in greenhouse gas concentration. This generates a renewed interest to look at the multi-decadal climate variabilities across the 20th century, which are often believed to be related to the internal variabilities caused by ocean-atmosphere interaction.

At the same time, an obvious interhemispheric tropospheric temperature trend asymmetry is found in both reanalysis datasets and model simulations during this time. Considering the rapid increase of industrial activities in North America and Europe, it generates another possibility that anthropogenic emissions play a role during this period. And if anthropogenic emissions do have significant effects, then the relative contributions of anthropogenic emissions and internal variabilities to the mid-20th-century cooling is worth understanding because of the increasing importance of human activities to the natural environment.

To test this hypothesis, we did a detailed analysis on the global temperature trend and the interhemispheric temperature trend asymmetry from the surface to the mid-troposphere based on Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 (CMIP5) multi-model ensemble and multiple reanalysis datasets. Our results show that the anthropogenic aerosol emissions contribute to global cooling and particularly asymmetry during the mid-20th century, and the fingerprint of anthropogenic emissions is more obvious in the mid-troposphere compared with the surface.

By different attribution methods (such as multi-linear regression and pattern correlation), we quantified the relative contributions of Anthropogenic Emissions and Internal variabilities based on single forcing simulations of seven CMIP5 models. We conclude that a superposition of Internal Variabilities originating from the Atlantic Ocean and anthropogenic aerosol emissions overwhelms the warming influence of GHGs and lead to the mid-20th century cooling period.

How to cite: Diao, C. and Xu, Y.: Attribution of the relative contributions of anthropogenic aerosols and decadal variability to the mid-20th century global “cooling”: a focus on tropospheric temperature latitudinal gradient, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3314, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3314, 2021.

EGU21-10722 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Regional and global temperature response, in PDRMIP data from a energy balance perspective 

Kalle Nordling, Joonas Merikanto, Jouni Räisänen, Bjørn Samset, and Hannele Korhonen

 


Modern climate models vary in their temperature responses to different climate forcers (such as CO2, methane, sulfate aerosols and black carbon). Here we study the reasons for model discrepancies  between different forcers by analyzing Precipitation Driver Response Model Intercomparison Project (PDRMIP) data. PDRMIP contains four different experiments in addition to the present-day base case: 1) fivefold sulfur concentrations, 2) tenfold black carbon concentrations, 3) twofold CO2 concentrations, and 4) threefold methane concentrations We use a set of modern climate models from PRDMIP dataset to decompose the temperature responses to various energy budget terms, the longwave and shortwave, cloudy and clear sky components, surface terms and horizontal energy transport. This study allows us to better understand the key processes responsible for climate model discrepancies in estimates of anthropogenic climate change impacts. Preliminary results show that magnitude of the temperature response of each forcer is similar, and mechanisms causing temperature changes are similar between different forcers. Somewhat surprisingly most of the model spread originates from changes in long wave radiations. Here we investigate global and regional responses and model spread for different climate forcers.

How to cite: Nordling, K., Merikanto, J., Räisänen, J., Samset, B., and Korhonen, H.: Regional and global temperature response, in PDRMIP data from a energy balance perspective , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10722, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10722, 2021.

EGU21-13320 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Decomposing local and remote surface temperature impacts of Asian aerosols

Joonas Merikanto, Kalle Nordling, Petri Räisänen, Jouni Räisänen, Declan O'Donnell, Antti-Ilari Partanen, and Hannele Korhonen

We investigate how a regionally confined radiative forcing of South and East Asian aerosols translate into local and remote surface temperature responses across the globe. To do so, we carry out equilibrium climate simulations with and without modern day South and East Asian anthropogenic aerosols in two climate models with independent development histories (ECHAM6.1 and NorESM1).  We run the models with the same anthropogenic aerosol representations via MACv2-SP (a simple plume implementation of the 2nd version of the Max Planck Institute Aerosol Climatology). This leads to a near identical change in instantaneous direct and indirect aerosol forcing due to removal of Asian aerosols in the two models. We then robustly decompose and compare the energetic pathways that give rise to the global and regional surface temperature effects in the models by a novel temperature response decomposition method, which translated the changes in atmospheric and surface energy fluxes into surface temperature responses by using a concept of planetary emissivity.  

We find that the removal of South and East Asian anthropogenic aerosols leads to strong local warming  response from increased clear-sky shortwave radiation over the region, combined with opposing warming and cooling responses due to changes in cloud longwave and shortwave radiation. However, the local warming response is strongly modulated by the changes in horizontal atmospheric energy transport. Atmospheric energy transport and changes in clear-sky longwave radiation redistribute the surface temperature responses efficiently across the Northern hemisphere, and to a lesser extent also over the Southern hemisphere. The model-mean global surface temperature response to Asian anthropogenic aerosol removal is 0.26±0.04 °C (0.22±0.03 for ECHAM6.1 and 0.30±0.03 °C for NorESM1) of warming. Model-to-model differences in global surface temperature response mainly arise from differences in longwave cloud (0.01±0.01 for ECHAM6.1 and 0.05±0.01 °C for NorESM1) and shortwave cloud (0.03±0.03 for ECHAM6.1 and 0.07±0.02 °C for NorESM1) responses. The differences in cloud responses between the models also dominate the differences in regional temperature responses. In both models, the Northern hemispheric surface warming amplifies towards the Arctic, where the total temperature response is highly seasonal and modulated by seasonal changes in oceanic heat exchange and clear-sky longwave radiation.

We estimate that under a strong Asian aerosol mitigation policy tied with strong greenhouse gas mitigation (Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 1-1.9) the Asian aerosol reductions can add around 8 years’ worth of current day global warming during the next few decades.

How to cite: Merikanto, J., Nordling, K., Räisänen, P., Räisänen, J., O'Donnell, D., Partanen, A.-I., and Korhonen, H.: Decomposing local and remote surface temperature impacts of Asian aerosols, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13320, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13320, 2021.

Over the past decades, the emission of anthropogenic aerosols in the Asian monsoon region is increasing. This change alters the climate condition, such as the Asian monsoon precipitation, through the aerosol–radiation and –cloud interactions (ACI). Previous studies pointed out that the slow response to aerosols, through the SST change induced by ACI, particularly around the Maritime Continent (MC), was the primary component of climate response to aerosols. Dynamical ocean feedbacks through ACI modify the Asian monsoon circulations and precipitation. Over and around the MC, the amount of aerosol was likely to be affected by the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). 
The aim of the study is to evaluate the climate response to anthropogenic aerosols in the Asian monsoon region. Also, we understand the relationship with SST change, including ENSO. To isolate the impact of anthropogenic aerosols, we analyzed the historical climate experiment (HIST) and the climate experiment with fixed aerosols at the preindustrial era (hist-piAer), which were provided in the CMIP6. As a result, the climatological mean surface air temperature in HIST was lower over most parts of the world than that in hist-piAer. However, a warm surface air temperature signal was found in the northern part of India, particularly in JJA during the rainy season. Also, there were dry signals in India and other Eurasia regions. We will also analyze fixed-SST historical simulation to identify physical process, including SST-related process.

How to cite: Kitabayashi, S. and Takahashi, H. G.: Climate response to anthropogenic aerosols and related SST variabilities including ENSO in the Asian monsoon region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14099, 2021.

EGU21-5787 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Future changes in Beijing haze events under different shared socioeconomic pathways

Liang Guo, Laura Wilcox, Massimo Bollasina, Steven Turnock, Marianne Lund, and Lixia Zhang

The occurrence of severe haze events remains a serious problem in Beijing. Previous studies suggested that the frequency of weather patterns conducive to haze may increase with global warming. The new Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) cover a wide range of uncertainties in aerosol and greenhouse gases emissions. Global and Chinese aerosol emissions are projected to decrease in most SSPs, while increases in greenhouse gases and global warming will continue for the rest of the century. The future, therefore, remains unclear.

We quantified the air pollution over Beijing and associated weather patterns using multiple indices calculated from the SSPs

We show that the occurrence of weather patterns conducive to the formation of haze significantly increases by the end of the century due to increases in greenhouse gases. Aerosol reductions also cause an increase in their occurrence, but reduce the severity of haze, and overall reducing aerosol emissions will be beneficial.

How to cite: Guo, L., Wilcox, L., Bollasina, M., Turnock, S., Lund, M., and Zhang, L.: Future changes in Beijing haze events under different shared socioeconomic pathways, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5787, 2021.

EGU21-450 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Intraseasonal variation and future projection of atmospheric diffusion conditions conducive to extreme haze formation over eastern China

Weiyang Feng, Minghuai Wang, Yang Zhang, Xianglin Dai, Xiaohong Liu, and Yangyang Xu

    Future projection of diffusion conditions associated with extreme haze events over eastern China is of great importance to government emission regulations and public human health. Here, the diffusion conditions and their changes under future warming scenarios are examined. The relative strength of haze events in the Northern China Plain region increase from 150% during 2006–15 to 190% during 2090–99 under RCP8.5 scenarios, induced by a stronger and longer-lasting anticyclone anomaly in eastern China. The strengthened anticyclone anomaly is mainly induced by increased northern wave train convergence emanating from the Barents–Kara Sea, and the longer duration of the anticyclone anomaly is mainly induced by stronger local feedback that can extract more energy from the basic state to maintain the anticyclone anomaly in eastern China. Aerosol reduction is found to play a dominant role in strengthening the upstream wave train near the Barents–Kara Sea and the downstream anticyclone in eastern China, while the effects from increased greenhouse gases are small. The results of this study indicate that future aerosol emissions reduction can induce deteriorating diffusion conditions, suggesting more stringent regulations on aerosol emissions in China are needed to meet air quality standards.

How to cite: Feng, W., Wang, M., Zhang, Y., Dai, X., Liu, X., and Xu, Y.: Intraseasonal variation and future projection of atmospheric diffusion conditions conducive to extreme haze formation over eastern China, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-450, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-450, 2021.

EGU21-13946 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Eastern equatorial Pacific warming delayed by aerosols and thermostat response to CO2

Ulla K. Heede and Alexey V. Fedorov

Understanding the tropical Pacific response to global warming remains a challenging problem due to discrepancies between models and observations, as well as a large intermodel spread in future projections. Here, we assess the recent and future evolution of the equatorial Pacific east-west temperature gradient, and the Walker circulation within the CMIP6 dataset. Using 40 models, we compare simulated tropical climate change across a wide range of experiments with varying CO2 and aerosol forcing. In abrupt CO2-increase scenarios, many models generate an initial strengthening of the east-west gradient resembling an ocean thermostat (OT), characterized by lack of warming in the central Pacific, followed by a small weakening; other models generate an immediate weakening that becomes progressively larger establishing a pronounced eastern equatorial Pacific (EP) warming pattern. The initial response in these CO2-only experiments is a very good predictor for the future EP pattern simulated in future warming scenarios, but not in historical simulations showing no multi-model trend. The likely explanation is that recent CO2-driven changes in the tropical Pacific, which are relatively small compared to future projections, are masked by aerosol effects. In future warming scenarios, however, the EP warming pattern emerges within 20-40 years as greenhouse gases overcome aerosol forcing. These findings highlight the need to understand the largely overlooked, but possibly significant role of aerosols in delaying sea surface warming in the tropical Pacific, and the implications for predicting future climate change across the tropics.

How to cite: Heede, U. K. and Fedorov, A. V.: Eastern equatorial Pacific warming delayed by aerosols and thermostat response to CO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13946, 2021.

EGU21-8164 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

Anthropogenic aerosols modulated twentieth-century Sahel rainfall variability via impacts on North Atlantic sea surface temperature

Shipeng Zhang, Philip Stier, Guy Dagan, and Minghuai Wang

Sahel rainfall experienced significant multidecadal variability over the twentieth century. Previous work have proposed several drivers to explain the severe drought and the subsequent recovery of Sahel rainfall in the past century, including anthropogenic aerosols, GHGs, and internal variabilities. However, the attribution remained ambiguous. Sahel summertime monsoon has close teleconnections with North Atlantic sea surface temperature (NASST) variability, which has been proven to be affected by aerosols. Therefore, changes in regional aerosols emission can potentially drive multidecadal Sahel rainfall variability.

Here we use ensembles of state-of-the-art global climate models (the CESM-large ensemble and CMIP6 models) and observational datasets to demonstrate that anthropogenic aerosols have significant impacts on twentieth-century Sahel rainfall multidecadal variability through modifying NASST. Aerosol-induced multidecadal variations of downward solar fluxes over the North Atlantic Ocean cause NASST variability during the 20th century, altering the strength of the Hadley cell and the ITCZ position, therefore, dynamically linking aerosol effects to Sahel rainfall variability. While the observed linear trend of NASST might still be affected by a mix of various external and internal drivers, our results suggest that NASST variability is most likely caused by aerosol-induced changes in radiative fluxes rather than changes in ocean circulations, and that anthropogenic aerosols can explain most of the detrended Sahel rainfall variability. CMIP6 models further suggest that aerosol-cloud interactions contributed more to the variability than aerosol-radiation interactions. These findings highlight the importance of accurate representation of regional aerosol radiative effects for the simulation of Sahel rainfall variability.

How to cite: Zhang, S., Stier, P., Dagan, G., and Wang, M.: Anthropogenic aerosols modulated twentieth-century Sahel rainfall variability via impacts on North Atlantic sea surface temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8164, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8164, 2021.

EGU21-12804 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2

In terms of radiative forcing, not all BC emissions are equal

Petri Räisänen, Antti-Ilari Partanen, Risto Makkonen, Joonas Merikanto, Mikko Savolahti, Alf Kirkevåg, Maria Sand, and Øyvind Seland

The development of robust emission metrics to guide climate policy is more complicated for short-lived climate forcers like black carbon (BC) than for long-lived greenhouse gases like CO2. The challenge is that for short-lived climate forcers, the atmospheric concentrations, the radiative forcing (RF), and ultimately, effects on climate, depend on the location and timing of the emissions.  In the present work, the impact of emission location and season on the RF resulting from emissions of BC is studied using the NorESM1 climate model. NorESM1 is run in a configuration in which the distribution of aerosols is simulated using a state-of-the-art aerosol scheme, but the interactive aerosols are not allowed to influence the simulated meteorological conditions. Consequently, the patterns of weather are repeated identically irrespective of the assumed aerosol emissions. This allows for an essentially noise-free evaluation of the radiative forcing associated with changes in aerosol emissions, irrespective of the magnitude and spatiotemporal extent of the emission changes.

We employ the model to systematically evaluate the radiative forcing efficiency (i.e., global-mean RF divided by the emissions) of BC emissions, for various assumptions about the latitude, longitude and season of the emissions. The BC direct effect and the effect of BC on snow albedo are considered. Preliminary results from tests focusing on BC emissions in the subarctic region (60-70°N) indicate the RF efficiency depends strongly both on the timing and longitude of the emissions. The RF efficiency of emissions in spring and summer is much larger than that of emissions in fall and winter, mainly due to the stronger insolation. Furthermore, emissions in the Siberian and North American sectors have higher RF efficiency than emissions in the Atlantic and European sectors. This is largely because emissions from subarctic Siberia and North America preferentially increase the atmospheric BC burden and BC deposition in regions with seasonal snow cover persisting into late spring / early summer. This acts to increase both the BC direct RF and the RF due to BC in snow. Furthermore, long atmospheric residence times act to increase the direct RF associated with Siberian BC emissions in summer.

An implication is that the use of large-scale mean (e.g., subarctic average) emission metrics may mispresent the role of BC emissions from smaller regions like individual countries.

How to cite: Räisänen, P., Partanen, A.-I., Makkonen, R., Merikanto, J., Savolahti, M., Kirkevåg, A., Sand, M., and Seland, Ø.: In terms of radiative forcing, not all BC emissions are equal, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12804, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12804, 2021.

EGU21-1266 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.2 | Highlight

 The Climate Response to Emissions Reductions due to COVID-19

Chris Jones and the Covid-MIP analysis

Many nations responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by restricting travel and other activities during 2020, resulting in temporarily reduced emissions of CO2, other greenhouse gases and ozone and aerosol precursors. We perform a coordinated Intercomparison, CovidMIP, of Earth System model simulations to assess the impact on climate of these emissions reductions. Eleven models performed multiple initial-condition ensembles to produce over 280 simulations spanning both initial condition and model structural uncertainty. We find model consensus on reduced aerosol amounts (particularly over East Asia) and associated increases in surface shortwave radiation levels. However, any impact on near-surface temperature or rainfall during 2020-2024 is extremely small and is not detectable in this initial analysis. Regional analyses on a finer scale, and closer attention to extremes (especially linked to changes in atmospheric composition and air quality) are required to test the impact of COVID-19-related emission reductions on near-term climate.

This first-look at results has focussed on surface climate, but future analysis will include attribution of drivers of climate signals; longer term implications of emissions reductions and options for economic recovery; quantifying changes in extremes; influence on atmospheric circulation and the carbon cycle.

How to cite: Jones, C. and the Covid-MIP analysis:  The Climate Response to Emissions Reductions due to COVID-19, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1266, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1266, 2021.

CL3.1.3 – Climate change in the North Atlantic in CMIP6 simulations

EGU21-8693 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Aerosol-forced AMOC changes in CMIP6 historical simulations.

Matthew Menary, Richard Allan, Jon Robson, Ben Booth, Christophe Cassou, Jonathan Gregory, Dan Hodson, Colin Jones, Juliette Mignot, Mark Ringer, Rowan Sutton, Laura Wilcox, Rong Zhang, and Guillaume Gastineau

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) has been, and will continue to be, a key factor in the modulation of climate change both locally and globally. However, there remains considerable uncertainty in recent AMOC evolution. Here, we show that the multi-model mean AMOC strengthened by approximately 10% from 1850-1985 in new simulations from the 6th Coupled Model Inter-comparison Project (CMIP6), a larger change than was seen in CMIP5. Across the models, the strength of the AMOC trend up to 1985 is related to a proxy for the strength of the aerosol forcing. Therefore, the multi-model difference is a result of stronger anthropogenic aerosol forcing on average in CMIP6 than CMIP5, which is primarily due to more models including aerosol-cloud interactions. However, observational constraints - including a historical sea surface temperature fingerprint and shortwave radiative forcing in recent decades - suggest that anthropogenic forcing and/or the AMOC response may be overestimated.

How to cite: Menary, M., Allan, R., Robson, J., Booth, B., Cassou, C., Gregory, J., Hodson, D., Jones, C., Mignot, J., Ringer, M., Sutton, R., Wilcox, L., Zhang, R., and Gastineau, G.: Aerosol-forced AMOC changes in CMIP6 historical simulations., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8693, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8693, 2021.

EGU21-8913 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

How does aerosol forcing drive a strengthening of the AMOC in CMIP6 historical simulations?

Jon Robson, Matthew Menary, Jonathan Gregory, Colin Jones, Bablu Sinha, David Stevens, Rowan Sutton, and Laura Wilcox

Previous work has shown that anthropogenic aerosol emissions drive a strengthening in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in CMIP6 historical simulations over ~1850-1985. However, the mechanisms driving the increase are not fully understood. Previously, forced AMOC changes have been linked to changes in surface heat fluxes, changes in salinity, and interhemispheric energy imbalances. Here we will show that across CMIP6 historical simulations there is a strong correlation between ocean heat loss from the subpolar North Atlantic and the forced change in the AMOC. Furthermore, the model spread in the surface heat flux change explains the spread of the AMOC response and is correlated with the strength of the models’ aerosol forcing.  However, the AMOC change is not strongly related to changes in downwelling surface shortwave radiation over the North Atlantic, showing that anthropogenic aerosols do not drive AMOC change through changes in the local surface radiation budget. Rather, by separating the models into those with ‘strong’ and ‘weak’ aerosol forcing, we show that aerosols appear to predominantly imprint their impact on the AMOC through changes in surface air temperature over the Northern Hemisphere and the consequent impact on latent and sensible heat flux. This thermodynamic driver (i.e. more heat loss from the North Atlantic) is enhanced both by the increase in the AMOC itself, which acts as a positive feedback, and by a response in atmospheric circulation. 

How to cite: Robson, J., Menary, M., Gregory, J., Jones, C., Sinha, B., Stevens, D., Sutton, R., and Wilcox, L.: How does aerosol forcing drive a strengthening of the AMOC in CMIP6 historical simulations?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8913, 2021.

EGU21-8287 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

The role of aerosol process representation in uncertainty in the North Atlantic region in CMIP6 

Laura Wilcox, Paul Griffiths, Daniel Grosvenor, James Keeble, and Jon Robson

EGU21-3077 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Trends, variability and predictive skill of the ocean heat content in North Atlantic: An analysis with the EC-Earth3 model

Teresa Carmo-Costa, Roberto Bilbao, Pablo Ortega, Ana Teles-Machado, and Emanuel Dutra

As the global climate is warming, with important regional differences, there is a growing need to (i) better understand whether and how internal variability controls the regional warming trends, and (ii) to identify the regions in which both the trends and the superimposed interannual variability are predictable. In this study we investigate trends, variability and predictive skill of the upper ocean heat content in the North Atlantic basin. This region is a source of decadal variability, in which internal ocean processes can locally modulate the global warming trends and add additional prediction skill. The analysis is focused on the period 1970-2014, and combines the study of an ensemble of ocean reanalyses, with two sets of CMIP6 experiments performed with the Earth system model EC-Earth3: (i) a 10-member historical ensemble; and (ii) an initialized 10-member retrospective decadal prediction system. External forcings are found to be important for the development of the regional trends, but on their own are unable to reproduce the exact geographical pattern. Our results also show that not all regions in the North Atlantic are equally predictable, which is explained by different contributions of the forcings and internal climate variability. While high levels of predictive skill in regions like the Eastern Subpolar North Atlantic, or the Irminger and Iceland Seas are clearly enabled by initialization, with a negligible influence of the external forcings, skill in others areas like the Subtropical North Atlantic, or the Gulf Stream extension mostly comes from the externally forced trends. The Labrador Sea is a particular case where predictive skill has both an external and internal origin. Large observational and modeling uncertainties affect the Central Subpolar North Atlantic, the only region exhibiting a cooling during the study period, uncertainties that might explain its very poor predictive skill. We would like to acknowledge the financial support from FCT through projects FCT-UIDB/50019/2020 and PD/BD/142785/2018.

How to cite: Carmo-Costa, T., Bilbao, R., Ortega, P., Teles-Machado, A., and Dutra, E.: Trends, variability and predictive skill of the ocean heat content in North Atlantic: An analysis with the EC-Earth3 model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3077, 2021.

EGU21-8452 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Future climate change scenarios shaped by inter-model differences in Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation response 

Katinka Bellomo, Michela Angeloni, Susanna Corti, and Jost von Hardenberg

In climate model simulations of future climate change, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is projected to decline. However, the impacts of this decline, relative to other changes, remain to be identified. Here we address this problem by analyzing 30 idealized abrupt-4xCO2 climate model simulations. We find that in models with larger AMOC decline, there is a minimum warming in the North Atlantic, a southward displacement of the Inter-tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and a poleward shift of the mid-latitude jet. The changes in the models with smaller AMOC decline are drastically different: there is a relatively larger warming in the North Atlantic, the precipitation response exhibits a wet-get-wetter, dry-get-drier pattern, and there are smaller displacements of the mid-latitude jet. Our study indicates that the AMOC is a major source of inter-model uncertainty, and continued observational efforts are needed to constrain the AMOC response in future climate change.

How to cite: Bellomo, K., Angeloni, M., Corti, S., and von Hardenberg, J.: Future climate change scenarios shaped by inter-model differences in Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation response , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8452, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8452, 2021.

EGU21-12155 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Deep-water formation and Arctic circulation under sea-ice retreat: a comparison between CMIP6 models

Anais Bretones, Kerim Hestnes Nisancioglu, and Mari Fjalstad Jensen

While a rapid sea-ice retreat in the Arctic has become ubiquitous, the potential weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning circulation (AMOC), in response to rising greenhouse gases, is still under debate. Although climate models predict a weakening of the AMOC, observations are so far inconclusive. It has been suggested that the strength and vertical extent of the AMOC responds to sea-ice retreat, as deep mixing occurs in open-ocean areas close to the sea-ice edge. Here, we investigate this hypothesis by looking at the Arctic tidional Overturning Circulation (ArMOC) and mixed-layer depth in several CMIP6 models forced with the SSP5- 8.5 scenario. For every models we find a decoupling of the ArMOC with the AMOC: while the AMOC weakens during the 21st century, the ArMOC is enhanced.

How to cite: Bretones, A., Hestnes Nisancioglu, K., and Fjalstad Jensen, M.: Deep-water formation and Arctic circulation under sea-ice retreat: a comparison between CMIP6 models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12155, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12155, 2021.

Euro-Atlantic climate modes such as the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the Eastern Atlantic pattern (EA), the Eastern Atlantic Western Russian pattern (EAWR) and the Scandinavian pattern (SCA) are known to significantly affect interannual-to-decadal climatic and hydroclimatic variability in the Euro-Mediterranean region. They are characterized by alternating positive and negative states of the associated index, each with specific climatic conditions that can last for several weeks or months and sometimes even years.

Knowing how these climate modes will be affected by future global warming conditions can help to constrain uncertainties in projections of Euro-Mediterranean regional climate variability.

In this contribution, we will present and discuss results from a CMIP6 multi-model analysis performed to investigate the presence of robust changes in these climate modes under the SSP585 future scenario of anthropogenic forcing  (fossil-fueled development with 8.5 W/m² forcing level). Toward this goal, we first search for a reliable box-based definition of an index for each of the abovementioned climate modes for the historical period and, then, perform a comparative assessment of the temporal, spectral and distributional properties of the so-defined indices during the historical (1850-2014) and future scenario (2014-2099) time periods, with a special focus on two interdecadal periods: 1960-1999 and 2060-2099. 

Early results show that there are significant changes in the future distributions of the climate modes with respect to the historical period, especially for what concerns the EA and the EAWR. 

How to cite: Cusinato, E. and Zanchettin, D.: Future Scenarios of Modes of Euro-Atlantic Atmospheric Variability: A First Look at CMIP6 Multi-Model Ensemble Results, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1685, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1685, 2021.

Despite ever-increasing anthropogenic forcing due to continuing GHG emissions, a slowdown in the rate of global warming has been monitored in the early 2000s and has been mostly attributed to the effect of internal climate variability. The weight of internal variability with respect to external forcing increases at regional scale and it is crucial to understand and quantify its role in future climate outcomes. In this study, we assess the near-term climate change over Europe by contrasting a suite of large ensemble of socio-economic pathways (SSP) projections conducted over 2020-2039, with historical simulations over 1995-2014 used as reference. The uncertainty associated with future anthropogenic forcing is taken into account by analysing 4 SSP projections (SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5, SSP3-7.0, SSP5-8.5), while the one associated with internal variability is assessed through the large ensembles of 30 members. Projections averaged over 4 SSP give a mean warming of +1.1°C over Northern Europe in Dec-Feb winter, as quantified by the difference between 20-yr averages over 2020-2039 compared to present-day (1995-2014). Since the signal (related to the forced response) to noise (related to internal variability) is small in all scenarios, ranging from 0.2 for SSP3-7.0 to 0.5 for SSP5-8.5, the 4 near-term ensembles are combined to create a super ensemble of 120 members to further evaluate the role of internal variability, whose likely range, defined by the 5th and 95th percentiles, is equal to 3.0°C for the region of interest. We apply the so-called storyline paradigm and find 4 families of future outcome, each family corresponding to a couple of given phases of the two main drivers of internal variability for Northern Europe winter temperature, namely the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) and the north Atlantic oscillation (NAO). More than a statistical classification, these storylines provide physically consistent future outcomes. The storyline characterised by stronger AMOC and positive NAO leads to the strongest warming, +2.3°C (+1.7 to +3.0), and has a large increase in precipitation, +10% (+5.2 to +16), compared to the storyline where AMOC is reduced and the NAO negative, leading to +0.19°C (-0.46 to +0.86) and +1.9% (-3.3 to +11) for temperature and precipitation only. Regarding temperature extremes, we show, regardless of the scenario, a clear decrease in the probability of extremely cold days in the near-term, and a statistically significant increase in the frequency of extremely warm days that is expected to double. There is, however, a larger dependence of extremes to the storyline family. In particular, the probability of occurrence of exceptionally warm days, defined by the 99th percentile level, is 4 times more likely in the combined AMOC and NAO positive phases storylines, while it is almost null for the counterpart one. We show here evidence that the storyline approach is a clear added-value to understand the role of internal variability in future climate and that it provides actionable information to users in presence of related irreducible variability uncertainties.

How to cite: Liné, A., Cassou, C., and Msadek, R.: Assessing the role of internal variability on projections of Northern Europe surface air-temperature at near-term (2020-2039) using a storyline approach, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15177, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15177, 2021.

EGU21-3894 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Efficient carbon drawdown allows for a high future carbon uptake in the North Atlantic

Nadine Goris, Jerry Tjiputra, Are Ohlsen, Jörg Schwinger, Siv Lauvset, and Emil Jeansson

As one of the major carbon sinks in the global ocean, the North Atlantic is a key player in mediating and ameliorating the ongoing global warming. Projections of the North Atlantic carbon sink in a high-CO2 future vary greatly among models, with some showing that a slowdown in carbon uptake has already begun and others predicting that this slowdown will not occur until nearly 2100.

Discrepancies among models largely originate because of differences in the efficiency of the high-latitude transport of carbon from the surface to the deep ocean. This transport occurs through biological production, deep convection and subsequent transport via the deep western boundary current. For an ensemble of 11 CMIP5-models, we studied the efficiency of this transport and identified two indicators of contemporary model behavior that are highly correlated with a model´s projected future carbon-uptake. The first indicator is the high latitude summer pCO2sea-anomaly of a model, which is tightly linked to winter mixing and nutrient supply, but also to deep convection. The second indicator is the fraction of the anthropogenic carbon-inventory stored below 1000-m depth, indicating how efficient carbon is transported into the deep ocean. By comparing to the observational database, these indicators allow us to better constrain the model ensemble, and demonstrate that the models with more efficient surface to deep transport are best aligned with current observations. These models also show the largest future North Atlantic carbon uptake, which we then conclude is the more plausible future evolution. We further study if the high correlations between our contemporary indicators and a model´s future North Atlantic carbon uptake is also upheld for the next model generation, CMIP6. We hypothesize that this is the case and that our indicators can not only help us to constrain the CMIP6 model ensemble but also inform us about progress made between CMIP5 and CMIP6 in terms of North Atlantic carbon uptake, winter mixing, nutrient supply, deep convection and transport of carbon into the deep ocean.

How to cite: Goris, N., Tjiputra, J., Ohlsen, A., Schwinger, J., Lauvset, S., and Jeansson, E.: Efficient carbon drawdown allows for a high future carbon uptake in the North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3894, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3894, 2021.

EGU21-3432 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) simulated during interglacials and its impact on climate

Zhiyi Jiang, Chris Brierley, David Thornalley, and Sophie Sax

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is a key mechanism of poleward heat transport and an important part of the global climate system. How it responded to past changes inforcing, such as experienced during Quaternary interglacials, is an intriguing and open question. Previous modelling studies suggest an enhanced AMOC in the mid-Holocene compared to the pre-industrial period. In previous simulations from the Palaeoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP), this arose from feedbacks between sea ice and AMOC changes, which also depended on resolution. Here I present aninitial analysis of the recently available PMIP4 simulations. This shows the overall strength of the AMOC does not markedly change between the mid-Holocene and piControl experiments (at least looking at the maximum of the mean meridional mass overturning streamfunction below 500m at 30oN and 50oN). This is not inconsistent with the proxy reconstructions using sortable silt and Pa/Th for the mid-Holocene. Here we analyse changes in the spatial structure of the meridional overturning circulation, along with their fingerprints on the surface temperature (computed through regression). We then estimate the percentage of the simulated surface temperature changes between the mid-Holocene and pre-industrial period that can be explained by AMOC. Furthermore, the analysis for the changes in the AMOC spatial structure has been extended to see if the same patterns of change hold for the last interglacial. The simulations will be compared to existing proxy reconstructions, as well as new palaeoceanographic reconstructions.

How to cite: Jiang, Z., Brierley, C., Thornalley, D., and Sax, S.: The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) simulated during interglacials and its impact on climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3432, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3432, 2021.

EGU21-7336 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Atlantic multi-centennial variability in IPSL-CM6A-LR climate model

Weimin Jiang, Guillaume Gastineau, and Francis Codron

A pronounced multi-centennial variability of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is found to be regulated by the salinity exchanges between the Atlantic and Arctic ocean in the IPSL-CM6A-LR atmosphere-ocean coupled model. The AMOC variations are preceded by salinity-driven density anomalies in the main deep convection sites in the Labrador and Greenland seas. Associated with a strong AMOC, the Arctic sea ice export through the Fram Strait reduces due to the decreased sea ice volume and anomalous northward currents. Anomalous freshwater hence accumulates at the surface in the Central Arctic. Meanwhile, the enhanced Atlantic inflow enters the Arctic through the Barents Sea and leads to a positive salinity in the Eastern Arctic subsurface. The surface freshwater anomalies last for 4 to 5 decades before they eventually reach the Lincoln Sea north of Greenland. The associated oceanic currents around Greenland reorganize, favoring the anomalous Arctic freshwater export to the North Atlantic and intensifying the stratification in deep convection sites. The AMOC then weakens, and the Central Arctic presents a positive surface salinity anomaly in turn. The oscillation switches to the opposite phase. These AMOC and sea ice fluctuations modulate climate worldwide, with a strong AMOC leading to a warming of 0.4°C in the northern extratropics, reaching up to 1°C in the Arctic lower troposphere during winter. In all seasons, a northward displacement of the intertropical convergence zone is also simulated.

How to cite: Jiang, W., Gastineau, G., and Codron, F.: Atlantic multi-centennial variability in IPSL-CM6A-LR climate model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7336, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7336, 2021.

EGU21-8747 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Internal Atlantic Multidecadal Variability mechanism at two model resolutions 

Michael Lai, Jon Robson, Laura Wilcox, and Nick Dunstone

The Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV) is a key factor in modulating climate change and its impacts around the world. Therefore, understanding of its physical mechanism will be crucial to achieving predictability on decadal timescales. However, details of the mechanism are not fully understood. This is evident in the wide range of simulated AMV timescales and spatial patterns exhibited by climate models in both pre-industrial and historical simulations.

In this study, we assess the impact of model resolution on the internal AMV mechanism by taking advantage of the close physical similarities between the medium- and low-resolution versions of the HadGEM3 models. Here, we present results from analysing the N96ORCA1 (~135km atmosphere, 1° ocean) and N216ORCA025 (~60km, 0.25°) pre-industrial simulations.

At both resolutions, we found that the internal AMV has a timescale of 70-100 years, comparable to the observed record. The processes driving decadal SST variability varies by latitude. Ocean heat transport changes associated with the AMOC drive subpolar variability, while surface fluxes associated with cloud and wind changes are more important in the subtropics. The AMOC strengthening is induced by density forcing from two sources. First, a Labrador Sea surface cooling driven by low-frequency positive NAO leads the AMOC by 5 years. Second, a source of anomalously saline Arctic water flowing into the subpolar North Atlantic also leads the AMOC by 5 years. Interestingly, the two resolutions disagree on the relative importance of these AMOC drivers. In the lower resolution model, the Arctic contribution is more important. However, the NAO dominates in the medium resolution model, and decadal NAO variability is more strongly associated with the AMV. Differences between the models are likely due to mean state differences including the strength and position of ocean currents such as the Gulf Stream, and their impacts on upper ocean properties.

 

How to cite: Lai, M., Robson, J., Wilcox, L., and Dunstone, N.: Internal Atlantic Multidecadal Variability mechanism at two model resolutions , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8747, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8747, 2021.

EGU21-2513 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.3

Skip high-volume data transfer and access free computing resources for your CMIP6 multi-model analyses

Maria Moreno de Castro, Marco Kulüke, Fabian Wachsmann, Regina Kwee-Hinzmann, Stephan Kindermann, Paola Nassisi, Guillaume Levavasseur, Sandro Fiore, Charlotte Pascoe, Martin Juckes, Sophie Morellon, and Sylvie Joussaume

Tired of downloading tons of model results? Is your internet connection flakey? Are you about to overload your computer’s memory with the constant increase of data volume and you need more computing resources? You can request free of charge computing time at one of the supercomputers of the Infrastructure of the European Network of Earth System modelling (IS-ENES)1, the European part of Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF)2, which also hosts and maintains more than 6 Petabytes of CMIP6 and CORDEX data.

Thanks to this new EU Comission funded service, you can run your own scripts in your favorite programming language and straightforward pre- and post-process model data. There is no need for heavy data transfer, just load with one line of code the data slice you need because your script will directly access the data pool. Therefore, days-lasting calculations will be done in seconds. You can test the service, we very easily provide pre-access activities.

In this session we will run Jupyter notebooks directly on the German Climate Computing Center (DKRZ)3, one of the ENES high performance computers and a ESGF data center, showing how to load, filter, concatenate, take means, and plot several CMIP6 models to compare their results, use some CMIP6 models to calculate some climate indexes for any location and period, and evaluate model skills with observational data. We will use Climate Data Operators (cdo)4 and Python packages for Big Data manipulation, as Intake5, to easily extract the data from the huge catalog, and Xarray6, to easily read NetDCF files and scale to parallel computing. We are continuously creating more use cases for multi-model evaluation, mechanisms of variability, and impact analysis, visit the demos, find more information, and apply here: https://portal.enes.org/data/data-metadata-service/analysis-platforms.

[1] https://is.enes.org/
[2] https://esgf.llnl.gov/
[3] https://www.dkrz.de/
[4] https://code.mpimet.mpg.de/projects/cdo/
[5] https://intake.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
[6] http://xarray.pydata.org/en/stable/

How to cite: Moreno de Castro, M., Kulüke, M., Wachsmann, F., Kwee-Hinzmann, R., Kindermann, S., Nassisi, P., Levavasseur, G., Fiore, S., Pascoe, C., Juckes, M., Morellon, S., and Joussaume, S.: Skip high-volume data transfer and access free computing resources for your CMIP6 multi-model analyses, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2513, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2513, 2021.

CL3.1.4 – Climate change in mediterranean climate-type zones

EGU21-3759 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4 | Highlight

Climate change impacts on the hydrology of south-western Australia

Don McFarlane

Climate change has profoundly affected the hydrology of south-western Australia since at least 1975. It took over a decade before the signal could be detected from annual variability. The impacts of rainfall reductions were exacerbated by higher temperatures and a decrease in wet periods when most recharge and runoff occurred. As a rule-of-thumb, runoff and recharge reduced by 3 percent for each percent reduction in rainfall.

Reductions in runoff were driven by falling groundwater levels. Stream- and dryland-salinity required levels be monitored, otherwise this driver would have gone unnoticed.

Runoff into reservoirs has almost ceased as processes irreversibly changed. Using historical records to estimate future runoff had limited application because of non-stationary processes.

While water resources have diminished, the threats posed by dryland salinity, stream salinity, flooding and waterlogging have decreased. While winter flood risks have dramatically reduced, summer flood risks appear to have increased.   

Almost all GCMs project an even drier and warmer future. Perth (population 2m) has avoided a ‘Day Zero’ by the rapid expansion of shallow- and deep-groundwater extraction, and seawater desalination. Highly treated wastewater has started to be added to augment drinking water aquifers.

Recharge under tree canopies have been most reduced. This is due to greater interception losses because showers have largely replaced heavy rain, and trees using a higher proportion of rainfall. Rainfall intensities, at least for long durations, have decreased despite the fear that higher sea surface temperatures (SST) and a warmer atmosphere will result in more intense rainfall. While SSTs have started to rise, there are complications related to El Niño– Southern Oscillation, the Indian Ocean Dipole and the warm Leeuwin Current that flows down the coast of Western Australia. This current results in much higher rainfall than would be expected and may weaken if El Niño becomes stronger and/or more frequent.  

As well as impacting water resources and rates of land degradation, climate change has affected ecosystems and industries. Abnormally hot and dry years have resulted in the deaths of trees able to withstand harsh Mediterranean summers. Wetlands have dried and groundwater-dependent ecosystems have been lost. Cereal crops are now grown in regions that used to be severely affected by soil waterlogging.  Tree plantations have become unviable due to slow wood growth and deaths.

Water restriction may have exacerbated urban heat islands as outdoor areas are irrigated less often, losing evaporative cooling. Fortunately, there are opportunities for diverting stormwater and treated wastewater to urban aquifers that provide a non-potable source of water for self-supply.

Government regulations and planning that have been set during the pre-1975 climate are struggling to keep pace with changes in understanding and future predictions. Restrictions tackling old problems are not being replaced with those needed for new issues. It is difficult to allocate water on a fixed volumetric basis when runoff and recharge are highly impacted. Society is also having to accept water reuse more quickly than is ideal.   

Lessons learned in SW Australia may be applicable to other Mediterranean climate zones.

How to cite: McFarlane, D.: Climate change impacts on the hydrology of south-western Australia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3759, 2021.

EGU21-4765 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4 | Highlight

Climate Zones Classification for Buildings Energy Efficiency Assessment

Josep Roca, Blanca Arellano, and Qianhui Zheng

The definition of the building climate zones is the basis for studying the effects of urban climate on building energy consumption and efficiency. In Spain, the transposition of the European Directive on Energy performance of buildings (Directive 2010/31/EU) has been carried out through the Technical Building Code (CTE), which divides the territory into climatic zones through which it evaluates the energy performance of buildings. However, the CTE carries out a climatic division based on administrative criteria ("provinces", NUT3), which leads to oversimplifying the Spanish climatic reality.

In this sense, the paper develops a new methodology for classification maps of climatic zones of buildings in Spain in order to improve the CTE. Therefore, the application in Spain of the CTE, Köppen and ANSI / ASHRAE methodologies are critically studied and compared. A first approach shows inadequacies that could be improve to optimize the energy efficiency of buildings. The climatic data for Spain -provided by the European Climate Assessment & Dataset Project (https://www.ecad.eu/) since 1950 (with a resolution of 1 km2/pixel) are analyzed, and a series of climatic indicators are established (such as the number of summer days, tropical nights, heating degree days, …). Next, OLS and cluster analysis are used as a method to define the Spanish climatic zones. Finally, the research proposes a new climate zones classification for Spain. The new classification provides more detailed climate information for building energy efficiency research and improves the classification defined in the CTE.

How to cite: Roca, J., Arellano, B., and Zheng, Q.: Climate Zones Classification for Buildings Energy Efficiency Assessment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4765, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4765, 2021.

EGU21-13493 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Time-evolving sea-surface warming patterns modulate the climate change response of precipitation in Mediterranean-like regions

Giuseppe Zappa, Paulo Ceppi, and Theodore Shepherd

Regions with a Mediterranean-like climate, apart for California, are projected to receive less rainfall due to climate change, thus posing serious implications for future water availability for societal and agricultural needs. At a first order, it is often assumed that water availability is proportional to global mean warming. Yet, the mechanisms controlling the precipitation response in Mediterranean climates remain only partly understood, as shown by the substantial uncertainty that still characterises the climate model projections. Here, by analysing projections from the CMIP5 climate models, we show that the linear scaling with warming does not apply in three key Mediterranean-like regions, namely Chile, California and the Mediterranean proper. In particular, despite long-term warming, the models show that the projected precipitation reduction in Chile and the Mediterranean halts as soon as anthropogenic forcing is stabilised, while the precipitation increase in California accelerates. By examining the response to an abrupt quadrupling of CO2, we demonstrate that such non-linearity in the time-evolution of precipitation cannot be solely explained by the well-known rapid adjustment to radiative forcing, but it is instead due to distinct fast and slow patterns of atmospheric circulation change, that are themselves forced by the time-evolution in the spatial patterns of sea-surface temperature warming. In particular, while the fast warming is favourable to force a poleward shift of the mid-latitudes jets, hence drying the Mediterranean and Chile, the slow warming, including an el nino-like pattern in the tropical Pacific, inhibits such shifts and precipitation changes, while favouring the wetting of California. The results show that stabilising GHG concentrations will have an immediate benefit to the hydro-climate of these Mediterranean-like regions, while pointing to constraining uncertainty in the patterns of surface warming as an important step to increase confidence in the future projections. 

How to cite: Zappa, G., Ceppi, P., and Shepherd, T.: Time-evolving sea-surface warming patterns modulate the climate change response of precipitation in Mediterranean-like regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13493, 2021.

EGU21-4546 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Large-scale drivers of the Mediterranean climate change hot-spot

Roman Brogli, Silje Lund Sørland, Nico Kröner, and Christoph Schär

It has long been recognized that the Mediterranean is a ‘hot-spot’ of climate change. The model-projected year-round precipitation decline and amplified summer warming are among the leading causes of the vulnerability of the Mediterranean to greenhouse gas-driven warming. We investigate large-scale drivers influencing both the Mediterranean drying and summer warming in regional climate simulations. To isolate the influence of multiple large-scale drivers, we sequentially add the respective drivers from global models to regional climate model simulations. Additionally, we confirm the robustness of our results across multiple ensembles of global and regional climate simulations.

We will present in detail how changes in the atmospheric stratification are key in causing the amplified Mediterranean summer warming. Together with the land-ocean warming contrast, stratification changes also drive the summer precipitation decline. Summer circulation changes generally have a surprisingly small influence on the changing Mediterranean summer climate. In contrast, changes in the circulation are the primary driver for the projected winter precipitation decline. Since land-ocean contrast and stratification changes are more robust in global climate simulations than circulation changes, we argue that the uncertainty associated with the projected climate change patterns should be considered smaller in summer than in winter.

References:

Brogli, R., S. L. Sørland, N. Kröner, and C. Schär, 2019: Causes of future Mediterranean precipitation decline depend on the season. Environmental Research Letters, 14, 114017, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/ab4438.

Brogli, R., N. Kröner, S. L. Sørland, D. Lüthi and C. Schär, 2019: The Role of Hadley Circulation and Lapse-Rate Changes for the Future European Summer Climate. Journal of Climate, 32, 385-404, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0431.1

How to cite: Brogli, R., Lund Sørland, S., Kröner, N., and Schär, C.: Large-scale drivers of the Mediterranean climate change hot-spot, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4546, 2021.

Numerous studies have highlighted the rapid pace of climate change in South Western Australia and quantifying hydrological shifts may provide insights into climate impacts in other Mediterranean regions. Identifying connections in data from spatially distributed rainfall stations using different interpolation approaches, can fill gaps in historical datasets and allow effective installation of new rain gauges based on optimal density and location. Different insights were revealed by using multiple approaches across the time series: the Seasonal Mann-Kendall Test, the Mann-Kendall Test under the Scaling Hypothesis (MKLTP), the Lanzante’s test (LAT) as single change point detection tests, the E-Agglomerative (ECP) and E-Divisive (EDP) change detection algorithms as multiple change point detection tests. Twenty seven loading factors (e.g. seasonal and annual Sen’s slope, the year and number of change points) were calculated from daily rainfall data collected over 100 years (1920-2019) from 107 meteorological stations in South Western Australia. The results illustrated that the rate of rainfall fluctuation in terms of Sen’s slope varied from -2.6 mm yr-1 in coastal areas to 0.9 mm yr-1 in inland areas. The scaling trend analysis identified that 53% of the stations were effected by long-term persistence in the wet season, in contrast to only 20% in the dry season. The single change point methods identified a change in the 1940s-1950s and the multiple change point methods identified two changes, in the 1940s and 2000s. The spatial correlation of stations were also mapped using an unsupervised machine learning approach (K-Means), the Multiscale Bootstrap Resampling (MBR), and loading factors, into three optimal clusters, indicating that rainfall in the coastal areas continue to decline, whereas rainfall in the inland areas has increased over the previous 100 years. These statistical and machine learning approaches are effective in identifying spatial and temporal variability in climate change trends.

How to cite: Alilou, H., Hipsey, M., and Oldham, C.: Quantifying spatial correlations and trends in rainfall data under a Mediterranean climate using non-parametric statistical and machine learning approaches, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5701, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5701, 2021.

EGU21-12803 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Mediterranean climate change projections: an update from CMIP5 and CMIP6.

Josep Cos, Francisco J Doblas-Reyes, and Martin Jury

The Mediterranean has been identified as a climate change hot-spot due to increased warming trends and precipitation decline. Recently, CMIP6 was found to show a higher climate sensitivity than its predecessor CMIP5, potentially further exacerbating related impacts on the Mediterranean region.

To estimate the impacts of the ongoing climate change on the region, we compare projections of various CMIP5 and CMIP6 experiments and scenarios. In particular, we focus on summer and winter changes in temperature and precipitation for the 21st century under RCP2.6/SSP1-2.6, RCP4.5/SSP2-4.5 and RCP8.5/SSP5-8.5 as well as the high resolution HighResMIP experiments. Additionally, to give robust estimates of projected changes we apply a novel model weighting scheme, accounting for historical performance and inter-independence of the multi-member multi-model ensembles, using ERA5, JRA55 and WFDE5 as observational reference. 

Our results indicate a significant and robust warming over the Mediterranean during the 21st century irrespective of the used ensemble and experiments. Nevertheless, the often attested amplified Mediterranean warming is only found for summer. The projected changes vary between the CMIP5 and CMIP6, with the latter projecting a stronger warming. For the high emission scenarios and without weighting, CMIP5 indicates a warming between 4 and 7.7ºC in summer and 2.7 and 5ºC in winter, while CMIP6 projects temperature increases between 5.6 and 9.2ºC in summer and 3.2 to 6.8ºC in winter until 2081-2100 in respect to 1985-2005. In contrast to temperature, precipitation changes show a higher level of uncertainty and spatial heterogeneity. However, for the high emission scenario, a robust decline in precipitation is projected for large parts of the Mediterranean during summer. First results applying the model weighting scheme indicate reductions in CMIP6 and increases in CMIP5 warming trends, thereby reducing differences between the two ensembles.

How to cite: Cos, J., Doblas-Reyes, F. J., and Jury, M.: Mediterranean climate change projections: an update from CMIP5 and CMIP6., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12803, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12803, 2021.

EGU21-1141 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Comparison of NINO1+2 and NINO3.4 indices in terms of ENSO effects over the Euro-Mediterranean Region

Ece Yavuzsoy, Yasemin Ezber, and Omer Lutfi Sen

El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a phenomenon in the equatorial Pacific that could have profound effects on climate around the world. Although ENSO impacts are fairly well-defined for south and north America, Australia and south-eastern Asia, they are not very clear for Euro-Mediterranean region. Some studies indicate that the negative phase of ENSO in Nino3 and Nino3.4 indices have similar effects in the negative phase of North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO).  ENSO impacts and teleconnection patterns are mostly studied using the Nino3.4 index. However, some recent studies indicate that the Nino1+2 index has higher correlation with climate variability over the Euro-Mediterranean region.

In this study, we investigate impacts of ENSO over the Euro-Mediterranean climate variability and atmospheric dynamics using the Nino1+2 and Nino3.4 indices. Additionally, we also tried to understand if there is any relation between ENSO and the Mediterranean and East Asian troughs. NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis surface air temperature, precipitation and 500 hPa geopotential height datasets and SST-based ENSO indices from ERSSTv4 were used in the analysis for boreal winter (December-January-February) for a period of 1950 - 2019. We utilized the Pearson correlation analysis to reveal the relation between these indices and climate parameters and the composite analysis  to define the pattern differences between the cold and warm phases of the indices.

Our preliminary findings show that there is a distinct correlation pattern between Nino indices and surface air temperature over the region of interest. Nino1+2 index has a more distinct dipole pattern with a significant positive correlation pole over central Europe and negative pole over north-eastern Africa. However, Nino3.4 indicates a rather zonal correlation dipole pattern whose poles are over northwest Africa (strongly positive) and northeast Africa (negative). It is also found that the Mediterranean trough location is sensitive to the phase of ENSO for both indices. Namely, the Mediterranean trough tends to be in the west of its climatological location for La Nina phases of Nino1+2 and Nino3.4, which affects the distribution of surface temperature and precipitation over the Euro-Mediterranean and Middle East and Northern Africa (MENA) regions. We concluded that the La Nina phase of Nino1+2 seems to play a more distinctive role in the dipole pattern. The surface air temperature is colder over the entire Europe while it is opposite in the Middle East region including Turkey. This dipole pattern is also detected for the La Nina phase of Nino3.4, but it is mostly observed over southwestern Europe and northern Africa. Comparison between the La Nina and El Nino phases of the Nino1+2 index indicates that for the La Nina phase precipitation is larger over the Aegean Sea and Italy and smaller in northern Europe.

How to cite: Yavuzsoy, E., Ezber, Y., and Sen, O. L.: Comparison of NINO1+2 and NINO3.4 indices in terms of ENSO effects over the Euro-Mediterranean Region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1141, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1141, 2021.

EGU21-706 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Eastern Mediterranean Drying: Projected Changes in Dynamics and Thermodynamics and Their Relation to Large-Scale Processes

Eilat Elbaum, Chaim I. Garfinkel, Ori Adam, and Efrat Morin

Observations from the past century and projections for the end of this century show a decrease in precipitation over the eastern Mediterranean Sea and surrounding land areas. Changes in precipitation are controlled by both thermodynamic and dynamic processes, but the relative contributions of these processes, in particular on regional scales, is not well understood. Models included in the fifth and sixth phases of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5 and CMIP6) exhibit a wide spread in the magnitude of expected drying in the eastern Mediterranean region, as well as in other meteorological variables. By decomposing projected changes in the moisture budget in 48 models into mean dynamic and mean thermodynamic components, we explore the contribution of each of these components to the model spread in regional drying. In the eastern Mediterranean, the dynamic component explains 64% and the thermodynamic component explains 9% of the variance in net precipitation change. We further examine the relation of the regional components to changes in five large-scale mechanisms: tropical vertical stratification, global near-surface temperature, latitude of the eddy-driven jet, stratospheric polar vortex, and arctic amplification. Of these, we find that a decrease in the dynamical contribution in the eastern Mediterranean, causing regional drying, is most strongly related to a northward shift of the eddy-driven jet and a rise in global near-surface temperature.

How to cite: Elbaum, E., Garfinkel, C. I., Adam, O., and Morin, E.: Eastern Mediterranean Drying: Projected Changes in Dynamics and Thermodynamics and Their Relation to Large-Scale Processes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-706, 2021.

EGU21-10019 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Extreme Precipitation in the Eastern Mediterranean in ERA5

Alexander Rischmüller, Alexia Karwat, Richard Blender, and Christian Franzke

Datasets with precipitation indices from the coastal areas of Syria, Lebanon and Israel are defined from the ERA5-Land database (0.1° resolution). In each coastal area the grid point with the highest hourly precipitation is selected. The declustered datasets are modelled by generalised Pareto distribution. The parameters of the stationary models are estimated using the maximum likelihood (MLE) and Bayesian inference methods.

Non-stationary models with several different covariates, i.e., time and teleconnection indices are incorporated into the scale parameter. The parameters of the non-stationary models are estimated using the MLE. The goodness-of-fit of stationary models is assessed by the Anderson-Darling test. QQ-plots subjectively assess the goodness-of-fit for both stationary and non-stationary models. The goodness-of-fit of non-stationary models is assessed in comparison to the stationary models with the likelihood ratio test (LRT) and with the differences in the Akaike information criterion (AIC).

The results show clear non-stationarity with the time covariates. Non-stationarity with teleconnection covariates is incoherent, except for the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO) in Syria. Return levels are estimated for stationary and non-stationary models which are obtained from different quantiles of the time-changing scale parameter vector according to -risk scenarios. The results show that return levels are highest in Syria and lowest in Israel.

How to cite: Rischmüller, A., Karwat, A., Blender, R., and Franzke, C.: Extreme Precipitation in the Eastern Mediterranean in ERA5, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10019, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10019, 2021.

EGU21-164 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Stable isotope composition of precipitation as signal of possible climate change: the case of the mountain Učka (Northern Adriatic, Croatia)

Diana Mance, Ema Topolnjak, Anita Crnov, Davor Mance, Maja Radišić, and Josip Rubinić

The highest average annual rainfall in Croatia is in the Northern Adriatic, with some parts of the region receiving more than 2000 mm per year. Characteristics of the region’s weather are periods of intense rain alternating with dry periods in which the amount of precipitation can be negligible for more than a month. The area's water supply relies on karst groundwater sources that are primarily fed by Mediterranean precipitation. The aforementioned precipitation regime results in high groundwater yields in the cold part of the hydrological year and substantially decreased water quantities in the summer months. Under such specific conditions, it is of considerable importance to find out about the potential for climate change in order to ensure timely adjustment of the management and use of natural sources of water.

We present a comparison of the isotopic composition of precipitation collected on the mountain Učka in periods 2008-2011 and 2019-2020. Rain gauges were located on a vertical gradient from sea level up to nearly 1400 m. Unlike the isotopic altitude effect that did not change significantly compared to the one reported for the first period (Roller-Lutz et al, 2013), the weighted means of isotopic values were more positive in the second period.  For the cold part of the hydrological year, local meteoric water line has recently moved to higher values, indicating the sources of precipitation from drier Mediterranean regions. Local meteoric water line for the warm part of the last hydrological year, indicates presence of increased evaporation and thus confirms lower precipitation amounts.

 

Roller-Lutz Zvjezdana, Mance Diana, Hunjak Tamara, Lutz Hans O. (2013) On the isotopic altitude effect of precipitation in the Northern Adriatic (Croatia), Isotopes in Hydrology, Marine Ecosystems and Climate Change Studies. Vol. I. Proceedings of an International Symposium

 

This work was supported by the University of Rijeka as part of the research project uniri-pr-prirod-19-24.

How to cite: Mance, D., Topolnjak, E., Crnov, A., Mance, D., Radišić, M., and Rubinić, J.: Stable isotope composition of precipitation as signal of possible climate change: the case of the mountain Učka (Northern Adriatic, Croatia), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-164, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-164, 2021.

EGU21-15872 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.4

Long-term (1900-2100) Hydrometeorological and Snow Water Equivalent reconstructions in the French Southern Alps (Mercantour Natural Parc).

Thibault Mathevet, Cyril Thébault, Jérôme Mansons, Matthieu Le Lay, Audrey Valery, Agnès Brenot, and Joel Gailhard

The aim of this communication is to present a study on climate variability and change on snow water equivalent (SWE) and streamflow over the 1900-2100 period in a mediteranean and moutainuous area.  It is based on SWE and streamflow observations, past reconstructions (1900-2018) and future GIEC scenarii (up to 2100) of some snow courses and hydrological stations situated within the French Southern Alps (Mercantour Natural Parc). This has been conducted by EDF (French hydropower company) and Mercantour Natural Parc.

This issue became particularly important since a decade, especially in regions where snow variability had a large impact on water resources availability, poor snow conditions in ski resorts and artificial snow production or impacts on mountainous ecosystems (fauna and flora). As a water resources manager in French mountainuous regions, EDF developed and managed a large hydrometeorological network since 1950. A recent data rescue research allowed to digitize long term SWE manual measurements of a hundred of snow courses within the French Alps. EDF have been operating an automatic SWE sensors network, complementary to historical snow course network. Based on numerous SWE observations time-series and snow modelization (Garavaglia et al., 2017), continuous daily historical SWE time-series have been reconstructed within the 1950-2018 period. These reconstructions have been extented to 1900 using 20 CR (20th century reanalyses by NOAA) reanalyses (ANATEM method, Kuentz et al., 2015) and up to 2100 using GIEC Climate Change scenarii (+4.5 W/m² and + 8.5 W/m² hypotheses). In the scope of this study, Mercantour Natural Parc is particularly interested by snow scenarii in the future and its impacts on their local flora and fauna.

Considering observations within Durance watershed and Mercantour region, this communication focuses on: (1) long term (1900-2018) analyses of variability and trend of hydrometeorological and snow variables (total precipitation, air temperature, snow water equivalent, snow line altitude, snow season length, streamflow regimes) , (2) long term variability of snow and hydrological regime of snow dominated watersheds and (3) future trends (2020 -2100) using GIEC Climate Change scenarii.

Comparing old period (1950-1984) to recent period (1984-2018), quantitative results within these regions roughly shows an increase of air temperature by 1.2 °C, an increase of snow line height by 200m, a reduction of SWE by 200 mm/year and a reduction of snow season duration by 15 days. Characterization of the increase of snow line height and SWE reduction are particularly important at a local and watershed scale. Then, this communication focuses on impacts on long-term time scales (2050, 2100). This long term change of snow dynamics within moutainuous regions both impacts (1) water resources management, (2) snow resorts and artificial snow production developments or (3) ecosystems dynamics.Connected to the evolution of snow seasonality, the impacts on hydrological regime and some streamflow signatures allow to characterize the possible evolution of water resources in this mediteranean and moutianuous region This study allowed to provide some local quantitative scenarii.

How to cite: Mathevet, T., Thébault, C., Mansons, J., Le Lay, M., Valery, A., Brenot, A., and Gailhard, J.: Long-term (1900-2100) Hydrometeorological and Snow Water Equivalent reconstructions in the French Southern Alps (Mercantour Natural Parc)., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15872, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15872, 2021.

CL3.1.8 – Detecting and attributing climate change: trends, extreme events, and impacts

EGU21-9611 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Robust detection of forced warming in the presence of potentially large climate variability

Sebastian Sippel, Nicolai Meinshausen, Eniko Székely, Erich Fischer, Angeline G. Pendergrass, Flavio Lehner, and Reto Knutti

Warming of the climate system is unequivocal and substantially exceeds unforced internal climate variability. Detection and attribution (D&A) employs spatio-temporal fingerprints of the externally forced climate response to assess the magnitude of a climate signal, such as the multi-decadal global temperature trend, while internal variability is often estimated from unforced (“control”) segments of climate model simulations (e.g. Santer et al. 2019). Estimates of the exact magnitude of decadal-scale internal variability, however, remain uncertain and are limited by relatively short observed records, their entanglement with the forced response, and considerable spread of simulated variability across climate models. Hence, a limitation of D&A is that robustness and confidence levels depend on the ability of climate models to correctly simulate internal variability (Bindoff et al., 2013).

For example, the large spread in simulated internal variability across climate models implies that the observed 40-year global mean temperature trend of about 0.76°C (1980-2019) would exceed the standard deviation of internally generated variability of a set of `low variability' models by far (> 5σ), corresponding to vanishingly small probabilities if taken at face value. But the observed trend would exceed the standard deviation of a few `high-variability' climate models `only' by a factor of about two, thus unlikely to be internally generated but not practically impossible given unavoidable climate system and observational uncertainties. This illustrates the key role of model uncertainty in the simulation of internal variability for D&A confidence estimates.

Here we use a novel statistical learning method to extract a fingerprint of climate change that is robust towards model differences and internal variability, even of large amplitude. We demonstrate that externally forced warming is distinct from internal variability and detectable with high confidence on any state-of-the-art climate model, even those that simulate the largest magnitude of unforced multi-decadal variability. Based on the median of all models, it is extremely likely that more than 85% of the observed warming trend over the last 40 years is externally driven. Detection remains robust even if their main modes of decadal variability would be scaled by a factor of two. It is extremely likely that at least 55% of the observed warming trend over the last 40 years cannot be explained by internal variability irrespective of which climate model’s natural variability estimates are used.

Our analysis helps to address this limitation in attributing warming to external forcing and provides a novel perspective for quantifying the magnitude of forced climate change even under uncertain but potentially large multi-decadal internal climate variability. This opens new opportunities to make D&A fingerprints robust in the presence of poorly quantified yet important features inextricably linked to model structural uncertainty, and the methodology may contribute to more robust detection and attribution of climate change to its various drivers.

 

Bindoff, N.L., et al., 2013. Detection and attribution of climate change: from global to regional. IPCC AR5, WG1, Chapter 10.

Santer, B.D., et al., 2019. Celebrating the anniversary of three key events in climate change science. Nat Clim Change 9(3), pp. 180-182.

How to cite: Sippel, S., Meinshausen, N., Székely, E., Fischer, E., Pendergrass, A. G., Lehner, F., and Knutti, R.: Robust detection of forced warming in the presence of potentially large climate variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9611, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9611, 2021.

EGU21-16112 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Updated attribution of GSAT changes and implications

Aurélien Ribes, Saïd Qasmi, and Nathan Gillett

The observed increase of global air surface temperature (GSAT) has long been attributed to human activities. However, updating estimates of human-induced changes, and changes induced by specific subsets of forcings (e.g., green-house gases) remains of high interest to better understand recent changes and also produce refined projections.

Here, we use the newest climate model ensemble (CMIP6), improved observations, and a new statistical method to narrow uncertainty on the response to historical forcings. In addition, we focus on estimating the total warming since the pre-industrial (using 1850-1900 as a reference baseline), while most previous studies considered shorter periods.

Results suggest that most of the observed warming since the pre-industrial (+1.22°C +/-0.15°C in 2020) is human-induced (+1.15°C +/-0.15°C) and that a substantial fraction of GHG-induced warming (+1.54°C +/-0.33°C) has been offset by other anthropogenic factors (-0.39°C +/-0.28°C). We also quantify the contribution of specific forcings to the 2010-2019 warming rate, suggesting that the current rate of human-induced warming is +0.22°C/decade (+/-0.05°C/decade). We then derive implications of these findings in terms of future climate change, i.e., the response to a range of scenarios. Our results suggest that historical observations and historical climate change are already very informative about future changes and the property of the Earth System in general.

How to cite: Ribes, A., Qasmi, S., and Gillett, N.: Updated attribution of GSAT changes and implications, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16112, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16112, 2021.

EGU21-1409 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

The impact of global climate change on the characteristics of seasons in the Carpathian Basin

Csenge Dian, Rita Pongrácz, Judit Bartholy, and Attila Talamon

Similarly to many other regions, warming and extreme weather conditions (e.g. related to temperature and precipitation) are expected to increase due to the effects of climate change in the Carpathian Basin during the 21st century. Consequently, as a result of the clearly detectable warming, the number of frost days in winter decreases and the summer heat waves become more frequent. The transition between winter and summer tends to become shorter and the inter-annual variability is likely to increase. The precise definition of the transition periods between the two extremes of the annual temperature course is very important for several disciplines, e.g. building energy design, where outdoor temperature is a key input to determine the beginning and end of heating and cooling periods. The aim of this research is to examine the possible transformation of the four seasons characteristics of the Carpathian Basin in details using various specific climate indexes (e.g. monthly percentiles, daily temperature fluctuation time series) based on the data of regional climate model simulations taking into account different future scenarios. For this purpose, RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios are compared to historical runs, and simulated temperature data series are analyzed for the middle and end of the century.

How to cite: Dian, C., Pongrácz, R., Bartholy, J., and Talamon, A.: The impact of global climate change on the characteristics of seasons in the Carpathian Basin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1409, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1409, 2021.

EGU21-3110 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

The effect of human influence on wet and dry European summers

Nikolaos Christidis and Peter Stott

As the climate becomes warmer under the influence of anthropogenic forcings, increases in the concentration of the atmospheric water vapour may lead to an intensification of wet and dry extremes. Understanding regional hydroclimatic changes can provide actionable information to help communities adapt to impacts specific to their location. This study employs an ensemble of 9 CMIP6 models and compares experiments with and without the effect of human influence using detection and attribution methodologies. The analysis employs two popular drought indices: the rainfall-based standardised precipitation index (SPI), and its extension, the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI), which also accounts for changes in potential evapotranspiration. Both indices are defined relative to the pre-industrial climate, which enables a comparison between past, present and future climatic conditions. Potential evapotranspiration is computed with the simple, temperature-based, Thornthwaite formula. The latter has been criticised for omitting the influences of radiation, humidity and wind, but has been shown to yield very similar trends, spatial averages and correlations with more sophisticated models. It is therefore deemed to be adequate in studies assessing the broader overall effect of climate change, which are more concerned with wet and dry trends and changes in characteristics of extremes rather than the precise estimation of drought index values. The rainfall-based index suggests a shift towards wetter conditions in the north and dryer in the south of the continent, as well as an overall increase in variability. Nevertheless, when the temperature effect is included, the wet trends in the north are largely masked leading to increasingly drier summers across most of the continent. A formal statistical methodology indicates that the fingerprint of forced climate change has emerged above variability and is thus detectable in the observational trends of both indices. A broadening of the SPI distribution also suggests higher rainfall variability in a warmer climate. The study demonstrates a striking drying trend in the Mediterranean region, suggesting that what were extremely dry conditions there in the pre-industrial climate may become normal by the end of the century.

How to cite: Christidis, N. and Stott, P.: The effect of human influence on wet and dry European summers, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3110, 2021.

EGU21-8186 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

The structure of precipitation and rainfall erosivity in the upper Parsęta catchment (Drawskie Lakeland, NW Poland) in 1987-2020 as an indicator of climate change

Mikolaj Majewski, Józef Szpikowski, Monika Domańska, and Grażyna Szpikowska

The impact of climate change observed in recent decades can be noticed in the structure of precipitation. The increasing amount of periods without rainfall, decreasing annual snowfall totals, and shortening the duration of snow cover significantly affect water resources and the intensity of a number of environmental processes, such as soil erosion by water.

The main aim of this paper is to determine the structure of rainfall in years 1987-2020, based on series of meteorological measurements in the Parsęta Base Station of Integrated Monitoring of Natural Environment at Storkowo in Drawskie Lakeland (NW Poland). The analyzes included precipitation amounts, number of days with precipitation, rainfall intensity, kinetic energy and erosivity and several rainfall indices. During this period, there is observed a significant increase of air temperature, which equals 0.47°C for 10 years. In the case of precipitation, a small increasing trend is marked statistically insignificant. The average annual precipitation was 698.6 mm, whilst precipitation in the winter half-year equalled 41.2% of total and 58.8% in the summer half-year. The annual rainfall erosivity, calculated according to Wishmeier and Smith’s formula, changed from 144.7 to 782.1 MJmm/ha/h, while Modified Fournier Index (MFI) ranged from 53.8 mm to 119.0 mm and was not statistically significant.

The analysis of precipitation with different daily totals did not show a significant increase in the share of precipitation with higher values. The relative precipitation index (RPI) showed no increase in the number of dry months of a year. Moreover, the analysis of occurrence of periods of light droughts, dry spells and droughts does not indicate any significant increase in the number and frequency of such events. On the other hand, a similar analysis of vegetation period (April-September) shows statistically insignificant trend of decrease in the number and frequency of precipitation less series. Another indicator important for the assessment of water conditions, the Sielianinov hydrothermal coefficient was calculated for period April-October, and showed lack of long-term trend changes in the observed period.

The water shortages in the upper Parsęta catchment observed in recent years are probably the result of decrease in the contribution of snow in the precipitation structure and a significant reduction in the number of days with snow cover. This limits the underground retention and surface outflow and has an impact on the functioning of biotic environment and agriculture.

How to cite: Majewski, M., Szpikowski, J., Domańska, M., and Szpikowska, G.: The structure of precipitation and rainfall erosivity in the upper Parsęta catchment (Drawskie Lakeland, NW Poland) in 1987-2020 as an indicator of climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8186, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8186, 2021.

EGU21-8375 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Influence of Different Phases of Quasi-Biennial Oscillation on the Evolution of Polar Stratospheric Zonal Winds 

Rahan Ozturk, Deniz Demirhan, Yurdanur Unal, and Sema Topcu

Stratospheric zonal winds are disturbed by tropospheric forced planetary waves which modulate the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) in the northern hemisphere during winter. QBO is the quasi periodic oscillation of zonal winds in the lower stratosphere with an average recurrence of 28 months. QBO is mainly characterized by zonal mean circulation in the equatorial and low latitudes of middle atmosphere. Investigations indicate that although QBO is an equatorial oscillation there is a strong correlation between QBO and stratospheric polar wind patterns. Additionally, westerly and easterly phases of QBO alter the strength of these winds differently. During the westerly phase of QBO, northern stratospheric zonal winds are stronger whereas the easterly phase coincides with the weaker stratospheric zonal winds.

In this study, easterly and westerly zonal winds at 30hPa for the latitudes between 5°S and 5°N which characterize the westerly (QBO-W) and easterly (QBO-E) phases of the QBO is examined using CMIP5 MPI-ESM-MR RCP4.5 scenario for the years between 2006 and 2099 for winter. It is found that climatic changes in the zonally asymmetric zonal wind characteristics in both phases of QBO modulates the polar stratospheric zonal winds differently. A prominent wave-1 structure in QBO-E phase and a wave-2 structure in QBO-W phase are apparent and effect the strength of the polar stratospheric zonal winds.

This study is a supported by TUBİTAK (The Scientific and Technology Research Council of Turkey), The Scientific and Technological Research Projects Funding Program, 1001.The project number is 117Y327.

 

 

How to cite: Ozturk, R., Demirhan, D., Unal, Y., and Topcu, S.: Influence of Different Phases of Quasi-Biennial Oscillation on the Evolution of Polar Stratospheric Zonal Winds , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8375, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8375, 2021.

EGU21-11183 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Emergence time of regional signals in tropical rainfall and sea surface temperature in CMIP5/6 simulations

Suresh Gopika, Iyyappan Suresh, Matthieu Lengaigne, Jerome Vialard, and Takeshi Izumo

The concept of emergence time allows to define when anthropogenically-forced signals become larger than the ambient natural climate noise and thus become detectable. While anthropogenic signals in globally-averaged Sea Surface Temperature (SST) usually emerge quite early in the 20th century, regional SST changes are more difficult to detect due to large aliasing by internal climate variability. Yet, changes in relative SST (RSST, SST minus its tropical mean) influence the stability of the atmosphere, and hence rainfall or extreme events like cyclones. Here, we focus on regional SST trends by computing the RSST emergence time in CMIP5/6 simulations and investigate their relationship with rainfall emergence time.

We first propose a new method for estimating the emergence time, based on an actual significance estimate rather than a simple signal to noise ratio, and compare the results with the estimates from traditional methods. By 2100, CMIP projections indicate enhanced warming relative to the tropical mean (positive RSST signal) in the equatorial Pacific, equatorial Atlantic, and the Arabian Sea, and reduced warming in the three subtropical gyres of the southern hemisphere. In broad agreement with observations, the Arabian Sea relative warming and South-Eastern Pacific relative cooling are already detectable in most models (median emergence time < 2020), making those regions suitable for testing a model's ability to predict a regional SST trend. In contrast, the RSST signals in other regions only become detectable after 2050. Patterns of rainfall changes are broadly consistent with the above RSST signals (more/less rain in positive/negative RSST area) but generally emerge one or two decades later. The only region where a rainfall signal emerges before an RSST signal is the central and eastern tropical Pacific, where increasing rainfall signals emerge around 2050 (CMIP median). The absence of currently-detectable regional rainfall trends in CMIP makes it difficult to validate climate models' ability to predict tropical regional rainfall trends.

 

How to cite: Gopika, S., Suresh, I., Lengaigne, M., Vialard, J., and Izumo, T.: Emergence time of regional signals in tropical rainfall and sea surface temperature in CMIP5/6 simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11183, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11183, 2021.

EGU21-13217 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8 | Highlight

Future Holiday Climate Index (HCI) Performances of Urban and Beach Destinations in the Mediterranean

F. Sibel Saygili Araci, O. Cenk Demiroglu, Aytac Pacal, C. Michael Hall, and M. Levent Kurnaz

Tourism is a major socioeconomic contributor to established and emerging destinations in the Mediterranean region. Recent studies introducing the Holiday Climate Index (HCI) highlight the significance of climate as a factor in sustaining the competitiveness of coastal and urban destinations. The aim of this study is to assess the future HCI performances of urban and beach destinations in the greater Mediterranean region. For this purpose, HCI scores for the reference (1971-2000) and future (2021-2050, 2070-2099) periods were computed with the use of two latest greenhouse gas concentration trajectories, RCP 4.5 and 8.5, based on the Middle East North Africa (MENA) Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) domain and data. The outputs were adjusted to a 500 m resolution via the use of lapse rate corrections that extrapolate the climate model topography against a resampled digital elevation model. All periodic results were seasonally aggregated and visualized on a (web) geographical information system (GIS). The web version of the GIS also allowed for a basic climate service where any user can search her/his place of interest overlaid with index ratings. Exposure levels are revealed at the macro scale while sensitivity is discussed through a validation of the climatic outputs against visitation data for one of Mediterranean's leading destinations, Antalya. HCI:Urban results showed that Canary Islands hold suitable conditions for tourism during almost all four seasons and all five periods which will have certain implications when other core Mediterranean competitors lose their relative climatic attractiveness. HCI:Beach results for the summer season showed that Las Canteras, Alicate, Pampelonne, Myrtos, Golden Sands and Edremit all pose Very Good to Excellent conditions without any Humidex risks for the extreme future scenario (2070-2099 RCP8.5).
Much detailed outputs of the study can be viewed from the web service at:
http://climatechange.boun.edu.tr/en/holiday-climatology-of-the-mediterranean/

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How to cite: Saygili Araci, F. S., Demiroglu, O. C., Pacal, A., Hall, C. M., and Kurnaz, M. L.: Future Holiday Climate Index (HCI) Performances of Urban and Beach Destinations in the Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13217, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13217, 2021.

EGU21-12126 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Spatio-temporal variations of climate variables and extreme indices over Iran during 1986-2015 

SayedMorteza Malaekeh, Ammar Safaie, and Layla Shiva

In order to better understand how climate changes have taken place in Iran, we carried out a comprehensive analysis of the spatio-temporal trends of various climate variables and extreme indices during 1986 to 2015 at the county-level across the country. Additionally, the interannual oscillation of the temperature and precipitation and their related extreme indices were examined throughout the research. In this study, ERA5-Land and AgrERA5 datasets with hourly, daily, and monthly temporal resolutions were aggregated to the county-level to calculate climate extreme indices. Subsequently, different approaches such as the original Mann-Kendall (MK) trend test, MK with block bootstrap modification, MK with variance correction modification, correlated seasonal MK (partial MK), original and seasonal Sen's Slope were implemented to detect the magnitude and the statistical significance of climatic trends for each county. Finally, the continuous wavelet transform was employed for whole country averages to investigate fluctuations and dominant periods of the variables and indices. The reanalysis model datasets offered us two advantages; firstly, it facilitates obtaining data in some regions with sparse weather stations and secondly, it allows us to inquire about some climate variables that were less studied in the literature, for instance, the wind speed, the surface air pressure, the solar radiation, the surface albedo, the runoff, the evaporation, and the skin reservoir content. The results showed a significant increasing trend in the temperature over all counties and a nonsignificant drying trend in the precipitation for almost the whole country. Other climate variables demonstrated more mixed spatio-temporal trends; however, generally, the wind speed and the solar radiation had an upward trend, the runoff, the skin reservoir content, and the surface albedo showed a downward trend, while the surface air pressure and the evaporation trends exhibited a great deal of variety. Furthermore, the hot climate extremes were increased throughout the country whereas the cold extremes and the extreme precipitations were quite in the opposite direction. It is noteworthy that the Continental and the Warm-Temperate climates were more vulnerable compare to the Arid and Semi-Arid Climates. At last, the wavelet power spectrum maps indicated the consistency between the temperature and precipitation and their related extremes and also showed a reduction in the fluctuation of the precipitation and a constant oscillation for temperature over the study period.

How to cite: Malaekeh, S., Safaie, A., and Shiva, L.: Spatio-temporal variations of climate variables and extreme indices over Iran during 1986-2015 , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12126, 2021.

EGU21-9079 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Climatology and Trends of Climate Extremes of Temperature and Precipitation in Belo Monte Hydropower Plant – Eastern Amazon, Brazil

Wanderson Luiz-Silva, Pedro Regoto, Camila Ferreira de Vasconcellos, Felipe Bevilaqua Foldes Guimarães, and Katia Cristina Garcia

This research aims to support studies related to the adaptation capacity of the Amazon region to climate change. The Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant (HPP) is in the Xingu River basin, in eastern Amazonia. Deforestation coupled with changes in water bodies that occurred in the drainage area of Belo Monte HPP over the past few decades can significantly influence the hydroclimatic features and, consequently, ecosystems and energy generation in the region. In this context, we analyze the climatology and trends of climate extremes in this area. The climate information comes from daily data in grid points of 0.25° x 0.25° for the period 1980-2013, available in http://careyking.com/data-downloads/. A set of 17 climate extremes indices based on daily data of maximum temperature (TX), minimum temperature (TN), and precipitation (PRCP) was calculated through the RClimDex software, recommended by the Expert Team on Climate Change Detection and Indices (ETCCDI). The Mann-Kendall and the Sen’s Curvature tests are used to assess the statistical significance and the magnitude of the trends, respectively. The drainage area of the Belo Monte HPP is dominated by two climatic types: an equatorial climate in the north-central portion of the basin, with high temperatures and little variation throughout the year (22°C to 32°C), in addition to more frequent precipitation; and a tropical climate in the south-central sector, which experiences slightly more pronounced temperature variations throughout the year (20°C to 33°C) and presents a more defined wet and dry periods. The south-central portion of the basin exhibits the highest temperature extremes, with the highest TX and the lowest TN of the year occurring in this area, both due to the predominant days of clear skies in the austral winter, as to the advance of intense masses of polar air at this period. The diurnal temperature range is lower in the north-central sector when compared to that in the south-central region since the first has greater cloud cover and a higher frequency of precipitation. The largest annual rainfall volumes are concentrated at the north and west sides (more than 1,800 mm) and the precipitation extremes are heterogeneous across the basin. The maximum number of consecutive dry days increases from the north (10 to 20 days) to the south (90 to 100 days). The annual frequency of warm days and nights is increasing significantly in a large part of the basin with a magnitude ranging predominantly from +7 to +19 days/decade. The annual rainfall shows a predominant elevation sign of up to +200 mm/decade only in the northern part of the basin, while the remainder shows a reduction of up to -100 mm/decade. The duration of drought periods increases in the south-central sector of the basin, reaching up to +13 days/decade in some areas. The results of this study will be used in the future as an important input, together with exposure, sensibility, and local adaptation capacity, to design adaptation strategies that are more consistent with local reality and to the needs of local communities.

How to cite: Luiz-Silva, W., Regoto, P., de Vasconcellos, C. F., Guimarães, F. B. F., and Garcia, K. C.: Climatology and Trends of Climate Extremes of Temperature and Precipitation in Belo Monte Hydropower Plant – Eastern Amazon, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9079, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9079, 2021.

EGU21-14855 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

On exposure of land area and population to heat waves and cold waves in a changing climate

Alexander Hampshire, Neven Fuckar, Clare Heaviside, and Myles Allen

As climate changes – potentially to a warmer state than any time during the evolution of humans – heat extremes threatening human health, global ecosystem and socio-economic fabric of our society are occurring at increasing frequency and intensity in most parts of the world. This study examines changes in global land area and population exposed to both tails of temperature distribution in changing climate since heat and cold exposure is directly associated with a range of health impacts and affects thermal comfort and occupational capacity. We first utilise the latest ECMWF atmospheric reanalysis, ERA5, to examine changes over the satellite era (since 1979), and then we explore the equivalent changes in CMIP6 archive of historical runs and future projections. Besides daily maximum and minimum of dry-bulb surface air temperature (SAT), we also consider daily extremes of the universal thermal climate index (UTCI) that includes the influence of humidity, wind and radiation encapsulating the synergetic heat exchanges between the environment and the human body. Our analysis dissects changes in spatial and temporal exposure to both heat waves and cold waves and presents metrics contrasting changes in the opposite extremes of SAT and UTCI distributions. We assess the significance of the observed, modelled and projected changes and relate them to external drivers of climate change.

How to cite: Hampshire, A., Fuckar, N., Heaviside, C., and Allen, M.: On exposure of land area and population to heat waves and cold waves in a changing climate, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14855, 2021.

EGU21-1438 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Identifying changing precipitation extremes in Sub-Saharan Africa with gauge and satellite products

Laura Harrison, Chris Funk, and Pete Peterson

Sparse gauge networks in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) limit our ability to identify changing precipitation extremes with in situ observations. Given the potential for satellite and satellite-gauge precipitation products to help, we investigate how daily gridded gauge and satellite products compare for seven core climate change precipitation indices. According to a new gauge-only product, the Rainfall Estimates on a Gridded Network (REGEN), there were notable changes in SSA precipitation characteristics between 1950 and 2013 in well-gauged areas. We examine these trends and how these vary for wet, intermediate, and dry areas. For a 31 year period of overlap, we compare REGEN data, other gridded products and three satellite products. Then for 1998–2013, we compare a set of 12 satellite products. Finally, we compare spatial patterns of 1983–2013 trends across all of SSA. Robust 1950–2013 trends indicate that in well-gauged areas extreme events became wetter, particularly in wet areas. Annual totals decreased due to fewer rain days. Between 1983 and 2013 there were positive trends in average precipitation intensity and annual maximum 1 d totals. These trends only represent 15% of SSA, however, and only one tenth of the main wet areas. Unfortunately, gauge and satellite products do not provide consensus for wet area trends. A promising result for identifying regional changes is that numerous satellite products do well at interannual variations in precipitation totals and number of rain days, even as well as some gauge-only products. Products are less accurate for dry spell length and average intensity and least accurate for annual maximum 1 d totals. Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission Multi-satellite Precipitation Analysis (3B42-V7) and Climate Hazards center Infrared Precipitation with Stations (CHIRPS v2.0) ranked highest for multiple indices. Several products have seemingly unrealistic trends outside of the well-gauged areas that may be due to influence of non-stationary systematic biases.

Harrison, L., Funk, C., & Peterson, P. (2019). Identifying changing precipitation extremes in Sub-Saharan Africa with gauge and satellite products. Environmental Research Letters, 14(8), 085007. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab2cae

How to cite: Harrison, L., Funk, C., and Peterson, P.: Identifying changing precipitation extremes in Sub-Saharan Africa with gauge and satellite products, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1438, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1438, 2021.

EGU21-1930 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Greenhouse gas and aerosol contributions to the observed global and regional changes in extreme temperature changes

Min-Gyu Seong, Seung-Ki Min, Yeon-Hee Kim, Xuebin Zhang, and Ying Sun

This study carried out an updated detection and attribution analysis of extreme temperature changes for 1951-2015. Four extreme temperature indices (warm extremes: annual maximum daily maximum/minimum temperatures; cold extremes: annual minimum daily maximum/minimum temperatures) were used considering global, continental (6 domains), and subcontinental (33 domains) scales. HadEX3 observations were compared with CMIP6 multi-model simulations using an optimal fingerprinting technique. Response patterns of extreme indices (fingerprints) to anthropogenic (ANT), greenhouse gas (GHG), anthropogenic aerosol (AA), and natural (NAT) forcings were estimated from corresponding CMIP6 forced simulations. Pre-industrial control simulations (CTL) were also used to estimate the internal variability. Results from two-signal detection analysis where the observations are simultaneously regressed onto ANT and NAT fingerprints reveal that ANT signals are robustly detected in separation from NAT in global and most continental regions for all extreme indices. At subcontinental scale, ANT detection occurs especially in warm extremes (more than 60% of regions). Results from three-signal detection analysis where observations are simultaneously regressed onto GHG, AA, and NAT fingerprints show that GHG signals are detected and separated from other external forcings over global, most continental, and several subcontinental (more than 60%) domains in warm extremes. In addition, AA influences are jointly detected in warm extremes over global, Europe and Asia. The detected GHG forcings are found to explain most of the observed warming while AA forcings contribute to the observed cooling for the early decades over globe, Europe, and Asia with a slight warming over Europe during recent decades. Overall, improved detection occurs compared to previous studies, especially in cold extremes, which is due to the use of extended period which increases signal-to-noise ratios.

How to cite: Seong, M.-G., Min, S.-K., Kim, Y.-H., Zhang, X., and Sun, Y.: Greenhouse gas and aerosol contributions to the observed global and regional changes in extreme temperature changes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1930, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1930, 2021.

EGU21-7137 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Assessing the contribution of multiple forcings to changes in temperature extremes 1981–2020 using CMIP6 climate models

Mastawesha Misganaw Engdaw, Andrew Ballinger, Gabriele Hegerl, and Andrea Steiner

In this study, we aim at quantifying the contribution of different forcings to changes in temperature extremes over 1981–2020 using CMIP6 climate model simulations. We first assess the changes in extreme hot and cold temperatures defined as days below 10% and above 90% of daily minimum temperature (TN10 and TN90) and daily maximum temperature (TX10 and TX90). We compute the change in percentage of extreme days per season for October-March (ONDJFM) and April-September (AMJJAS). Spatial and temporal trends are quantified using multi-model mean of all-forcings simulations. The same indices will be computed from aerosols-, greenhouse gases- and natural-only forcing simulations. The trends estimated from all-forcings simulations are then attributed to different forcings (aerosols-, greenhouse gases-, and natural-only) by considering uncertainties not only in amplitude but also in response patterns of climate models. The new statistical approach to climate change detection and attribution method by Ribes et al. (2017) is used to quantify the contribution of human-induced climate change. Preliminary results of the attribution analysis show that anthropogenic climate change has the largest contribution to the changes in temperature extremes in different regions of the world.

Keywords: climate change, temperature, extreme events, attribution, CMIP6

 

Acknowledgement: This work was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) under Research Grant W1256 (Doctoral Programme Climate Change: Uncertainties, Thresholds and Coping Strategies)

How to cite: Engdaw, M. M., Ballinger, A., Hegerl, G., and Steiner, A.: Assessing the contribution of multiple forcings to changes in temperature extremes 1981–2020 using CMIP6 climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7137, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7137, 2021.

EGU21-3631 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8 | Highlight

Substantial Increase in the Joint Occurrence and Human Exposure of Heatwave and High‐PM Hazards Over South Asia in the Mid‐21st Century

Xiaokang Wu, Yangyang Xu, Rajesh Kumar, Mary Barth, Chenrui Diao, Meng Gao, Lei Lin, Bryan Jones, and Gerald Meehl

Extreme heat occurrence worldwide has increased in the past decades. Greenhouse gas emissions, if not abated aggressively, will lead to large increases in frequency and intensity of heat extremes. At the same time, many cities are facing severe air pollution problems featuring high‐PM episodes that last from days to weeks. Based on a high‐resolution decadal‐long model simulation using a state‐of‐the‐science regional chemistry‐climate model that is bias corrected against reanalysis, here we show that when daily average wet‐bulb temperature of 25 °C is taken as the threshold for severe health impacts, heat extremes frequency averaged over South Asia increases from 45 ± 5 days/year in 1997–2004 to 78 ± 3 days/year in 2046–2054 under RCP8.5 scenario. With daily averaged PM2.5 surface concentration of 60 μg/m3 defined as the threshold for such “unhealthy” extremes, high‐PM extremes would occur 132 ± 8 days/year in the Decade 2050 under RCP8.5. Even more concerning, due to the potential health impacts of two stressors acting in tandem, is the joint occurrence of the heatwave and high‐PM hazard (HHH), which would have substantial increases of 175% in frequency and 79% in duration. This is in contrast to the 73–76% increase for heatwave or high PM when assessed individually. The fraction of land exposed to prolonged HHH increases by more than tenfold in 2050. The alarming increases in just a few decades pose great challenges to adaptation and call for more aggressive mitigation. For example, under a lower emission pathway, the frequency of HHH will only increase by 58% with a lower frequency of high‐PM extremes.

How to cite: Wu, X., Xu, Y., Kumar, R., Barth, M., Diao, C., Gao, M., Lin, L., Jones, B., and Meehl, G.: Substantial Increase in the Joint Occurrence and Human Exposure of Heatwave and High‐PM Hazards Over South Asia in the Mid‐21st Century, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3631, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3631, 2021.

EGU21-9993 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Copula based Assessment of Climate Extremes across India: Past and Future

Nikhil Kumar, Manish Kumar Goyal, Anil Kumar Gupta, Srinidhi Jha, Jew Das, and Chandra A. Madramootoo

Climate change significantly influences the global hydrological cycle and consequently affects climatic extremes. The present study is focussed upon varying patterns of climate extremes using observed daily precipitation (1989-2019), daily temperature from Global Meteorological Forcing Dataset (GMFD) (1985-2016) and simulated daily meteorological forcing data (2025-2055 and 2065-2095) of 21 GCMs attained from the statistically downscaled dataset, NEX-GDDP (NASA Earth Exchange Global Daily Downscaled Projections) under RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenario across India. The copula method was employed to estimate the joint return period based on different climate extreme indices. Here, we found that R20, R95p and CWD attain an increasing trend and CDD mostly shows a decreasing trend in major segments of country in future. Based upon the 10-year joint return periods (1989-2019), it is found that parts of north-western, north-eastern, southern, western region and Western Ghats are highly prone towards floods and a large portion of the country is susceptible to co-occurrence of floods and droughts. Moreover, the study shows that many regions with less vulnerability towards precipitation extremes would become more vulnerable in future. Furthermore, TXx, TNx, TX90p, TN90p, TNn and TXn are found to be significantly increasing in future except increasing during 2065-2095 under RCP4.5 predominantly across the country. And, TX10p and TN10p follows a significantly decreasing trend in future across the except exhibiting a decreasing trend during 2065-2095 under RCP4.5, throughout the country. With the projected increase in hot days/nights, the frequency of concurrence of extreme number of hot days (TX90p) and nights (TN90p) within a year would increase in the future across the country. The present study provides useful information on the regional distribution of climate extremes and how they might change in the future. This information can further contribute to facilitate an effective planning strategy to improve resilience towards climate extremes.

How to cite: Kumar, N., Kumar Goyal, M., Kumar Gupta, A., Jha, S., Das, J., and A. Madramootoo, C.: Copula based Assessment of Climate Extremes across India: Past and Future, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9993, 2021.

EGU21-12577 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Changes in patterns of extreme temperature distribution across different regions in India

Angana Borah and Udit Bhatia

Global studies of extreme temperature suggest that in recent times there has been an increase in frequency and intensity for hot temperature and decrease for cold temperatures  while a few others show an increase in both warm and cold extremes in the last decade of the twentieth century. Previous research on large scale climate projections show an amplified increase in the highest percentile of maxima and minima, with respect to the lowest percentiles of temperature extremes. The indices recommended by the Expert Team for Climate Change Detection Monitoring and Indices (ETCCDMI) to analyse trends of extreme climate are pertinent to policy and decision making with regard to impact and adaptation studies. While literature is abundant with large scale evaluation of trends in extreme temperatures, there is a want of studies in the regional patterns and distribution of temperature extremes in India. Although India is widely known as a tropical country, the diversities found in the topography of the regions from north to south and east to west, renders microclimate unique to each region leading to disparate inter-annual temperature ranges across the country. So, it is important to explore how regional trends in the different climatic zones of the Indian subcontinent correspond with each other in view of its unique climatic regimes. A comprehensive analysis of temperature extremes in the urban agglomerates and their suburban and rural counterparts is relatively unexplored for India. The results offer insights on the change in the percentile based indices recommended by the IPCC as well as summer and winter maximas and minimas for the entire India over the last several decades. The frequency and intensity of extreme temperatures characterised by number of days less than 10th percentile and more than 90th percentile, and minimum annual minimum temperature and maximum annual maximum temperature respectively, of the distribution over the last six decades have been assessed. The findings of this study suggests that warmer extremes follow an increasing trend, while the colder extremes exhibit no significant trend. However, the trends appear to be spatially coherent irrespective of the extent of urbanization.   Additionally, change in maximum and minimum percentiles of summer and winter temperatures are assessed between the first half of the last century and  the later half of the last century, for the entire country. It was found that change in highest percentiles in both summer and winter minima is more pronounced than lowest percentiles, while increase in highest percentile is more amplified for summer and winter maxima. 

 

How to cite: Borah, A. and Bhatia, U.: Changes in patterns of extreme temperature distribution across different regions in India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12577, 2021.

EGU21-14960 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Sensitivity of the hydrological cycle to aerosol type and amount using high-resolution weather research and forecasting model over India

Sauvik Santra, Shubha Verma, Roxy Mathew Koll, and Olivier Boucher

The present study is aimed to provide a quantitative prediction of the comparative impact of aerosol types on the changing pattern of the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) rainfall over recent years. Specific regions with contrasting features of aerosol loading and changes in ISM rainfall pattern relationship were identified through the comparative analysis of long-term (2000 to 2019) spatial distribution of observed AOD and rainfall over the Indian subcontinent. The spatial distribution of aerosol species were estimated using constrained aerosol estimation which could well represent the measured values. Spatial concordances were identified between the contrasting spatial features of changes in ISM rainfall pattern and the spatial distribution of pre-monsoon (March, April, May) anthropogenic and dust aerosols. Optical parameters consisting of aerosol optical depth (AOD), single scattering albedo (SSA), angstrom exponent (AE) corresponding to the estimated spatial distribution of aerosol types were simulated using optical simulation (OPTSIM) and further used in an aerosol radiative feedback simulation (ARFS) to evaluate the impact on ISM rainfall. The positive and negative radiative effect at the top of the atmosphere (TOA) were identified over the anthropogenic and dust aerosols dominated areas respectively. Although surface cooling was caused by both anthropogenic and dust aerosols, dust aerosols contributed to significantly higher surface cooling than the anthropogenic aerosols over the northwestern India (NWI) region. However, over the Indo-Gangetic plain (IGP) region, higher surface cooling was caused by the anthropogenic aerosols. A significant increase in rainfall with respect to no aerosol scenario was identified along the western coast of India due to combined aerosols (both anthropogenic and dust), which is notably in line with the current observations of high rainfall incidents over the region. Overall an increase and decrease in the ISM rainfall was observed over the NWI and IGP region respectively, which is strongly correlated to the spatial distribution of aerosol types over the Indian subcontinent. Production of less but heavier cloud droplets, leading to an enhanced condensation and increased rainfall over the NWI region was attributed to the comparative enhancement of regional evaporation rate due to a weaker surface cooling and atmospheric warming effect of dust aerosols than in the case of anthropogenic aerosols. Reduction in the ISM rainfall over the IGP region was attributed to the enhanced surface cooling due to anthropogenic aerosols (mostly dominated by sulphate aerosols), potentially suppressing the effective evaporation from the region.

How to cite: Santra, S., Verma, S., Koll, R. M., and Boucher, O.: Sensitivity of the hydrological cycle to aerosol type and amount using high-resolution weather research and forecasting model over India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14960, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14960, 2021.

Using a high-resolution daily gridded rainfall data of 0.25° from the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD), the present study investigates the detailed characteristics of rainfall in the Bhakra Catchment from 1901 to 2019. The long term spatial and temporal rainfall variations in Bhakra Catchment are not well explored. The spatial pattern of rainfall regimes in this catchment is identified by estimating index like the precipitation concentration index (PCI) and seasonality index (SI). Extreme rainfall trends on annual and seasonal basis are examined using the innovative trend analysis (ITA) method. Reliability of ITA was assessed by comparing them with widely applied Mann–Kendall (MK) or modified Mann–Kendall (mMK) test results. Furthermore, the change in two halves of rainfall series is estimated using percent bias technique for estimating changes in rainfall. Changes in slopes are estimated by using Sen’s slope estimator (Q). Discrete wavelet transform (DWT) in conjunction with Sequential Mann–Kendall test (SQMK) is employed to find out the dominant periodicity in rainfall patterns. The effectiveness of the graphical method in qualitative analysis can be seen, while DWT is found efficient in identifying periodicity. Both positive and negative trends are detected in annual and seasonal time series over the study area. The outcomes of this study may be helpful in the planning and management of water resources projects in the catchment along with the planning of mitigation measures to alleviate the effects of climate change under extreme rainfall conditions.

How to cite: Gupta, N. and Chavan, S.:  Spatio-temporal characterization of rainfall using an innovative trend and discrete wavelet transformation approaches in Bhakra catchment, India, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15857, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15857, 2021.

EGU21-6925 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Detecting anthropogenic effects on the record-warm northwestern Pacific sea surface temperature in August 2020

Michiya Hayashi, Hideo Shiogama, Seita Emori, Tomoo Ogura, and Nagio Hirota

August 2020 set a new record high sea surface temperature (SST) in the northwestern Pacific (NWPac; 120°E–180°E, 20°N–35°N). This anomalous condition potentially intensified tropical cyclones such as Typhoon Haishen, causing severe damage to the Korean Peninsula and Japan. Although the NWPac Ocean has gradually warmed due to human-induced greenhouse gas emissions since the mid‐20th century, the extent to which anthropogenic climate changes increase the occurrence likelihood of such regionally unprecedented warm SSTs is unclear yet. Here we analyzed the historical and SSP2-4.5 scenario simulations of CMIP6 and DAMIP as well as observational datasets. Our results show that owing to historical anthropogenic forcing, the occurrence probability of the 2020 record-warm NWPac SST is increased from once-in-1000 years to about once-in-15 years in 2001-2020. As warming caused by greenhouse gases was largely canceled by aerosol cooling, anthropogenic effects on the NWPac SST were not distinguishable from internal variability in the 20th century. The SSP2-4.5 scenario simulations also indicate that the 2020 record-warm SST is becoming a new normal climate condition of August by 2031–2050, or once the global air temperature above preindustrial level exceeds 1.5°C.

How to cite: Hayashi, M., Shiogama, H., Emori, S., Ogura, T., and Hirota, N.: Detecting anthropogenic effects on the record-warm northwestern Pacific sea surface temperature in August 2020, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6925, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6925, 2021.

EGU21-12087 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

CHANGES IN COMBINED EFFECT OF EXTREMES BASED ON MODIFIED CLIMATE EXTREMES INDEX (mCEI) OVER THE EUROPE-MEDITERRANEAN REGION

Mehmet Barış Kelebek, Fulden Batıbeniz, and Barış Önol

Multiple climate extremes have diverse impacts on the human environment and the natural ecosystem. The use of a compact set of climate change indices enhances our understanding of the combined impacts of extreme climatic conditions. In this study, we calculated percentile based extreme temperature and precipitation indices, and self-calibrating Palmer Drought Severity Index over the Europe-Mediterranean (EURO-MED) region for 1979-2016 period. Moreover, we extended the Climate Extremes Index (CEI) as the modified Climate Extremes Index (mCEI) to obtain combined information regarding the extremes on the grid basis. As a holistic approach mCEI provides detailed spatiotemporal information on annual timescale, and high-resolution grid-based data allows us to do detailed country-based and city-based analyses. For temperature, we use the last generation ERA5 reanalysis dataset, and for precipitation, we use MSWEP gridded observational dataset. The results indicate that warm temperature extremes are significantly on the rise over the EURO-MED region whereas the cold temperature extremes decrease. The extreme drought has a significant increasing trend. Although there are heterogeneous regional distributions, extreme precipitation indices have a significant increasing tendency. Additionally, we found that the Mediterranean coasts, the Balkan countries, the Eastern Europe, Iceland, the parts of western Russia, the parts of Turkey, and the parts of Syria and Iraq are the major hot-spots for the combined extremes based on mCEI. Among the major urban agglomerations of the EURO-MED region, 28 cities exhibit a significant increasing trend of the mCEI greater than 1.5% decade-1. These results agree with the previous findings related to the climatic extremes of the EURO-MED climate hotspot, and strengthen the findings on human-induced climate change.

How to cite: Kelebek, M. B., Batıbeniz, F., and Önol, B.: CHANGES IN COMBINED EFFECT OF EXTREMES BASED ON MODIFIED CLIMATE EXTREMES INDEX (mCEI) OVER THE EUROPE-MEDITERRANEAN REGION, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12087, 2021.

EGU21-13560 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Attributing temperature extremes in the Euro-Atlantic region to Arctic Sea Ice changes using a framework of conditional extreme event attribution

Johannes Riebold, Andy Richling, Henning Rust, Uwe Ulbrich, and Dörthe Handorf
Over the last century and decades, Arctic climate change has been detected coming along with a rapid decrease of Arctic sea ice extent and a much faster warming of Arctic regions compared to global average. At the same time, an increasing number of record-breaking extreme weather events has been observed also over midlatitudes. In this respect, several studies proposed and studied dynamical Arctic-midlatitude pathways suggesting that Arctic sea ice retreat may not only have local impacts on the polar atmosphere but is also linked to weather and climate in midlatitudes.
In this study, we aim to assess to what extent temperature extremes in the Euro-Atlantic region may be attributed to Arctic sea ice changes. Therefore, in the context of circulation regimes we apply a framework of conditional extreme event attribution to ECHAM6 time slice simulations forced under different sea ice scenarios. As extreme events are generally strongly conditioned and dynamically-driven by specific atmospheric flow configurations, this will help to separate the overall effect induced by Arctic sea ice changes into its thermodynamical and dynamical contributions. This is also motivated by previous studies indicating that sea ice retreat might influence the occurrence probability of certain circulation regimes or blocking patterns and therefore may impact potential dynamical drivers of such extremes.
 

How to cite: Riebold, J., Richling, A., Rust, H., Ulbrich, U., and Handorf, D.: Attributing temperature extremes in the Euro-Atlantic region to Arctic Sea Ice changes using a framework of conditional extreme event attribution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13560, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13560, 2021.

EGU21-7045 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Towards a conditional representation of heat wave probability in large ensemble climate model data

Joel Zeder and Erich M. Fischer

Research Objective: Single-model initial condition large ensembles provide novel opportunities to study the physical drivers and risks of large-scale climate extremes in a changing climate. The probability of extremes such as weekly heatwaves, here quantified as seven-day maximum temperature (Tx7d), are usually approximated with a general extreme value distribution GEV  that is stationary or accounts for non-stationarity of a warming climate. However, estimating the occurrence probability of very rare climate extremes in the presence of large internal variability further benefits from the integration of process-based covariates characterising the preceding and concurrent climate conditions both at global and local scale.

Data & Methods: We here use more than 6000 years of stationary pre-industrial and 2xCO2 control simulations and an ensemble of 84 transient historical and RCP8.5 simulations performed with the Community Earth System Model CESM1.2 to develop and robustly test methods of quantifying extreme events under a broad range of climatic conditions. The generalised extreme value distribution is parametrised such that it can account for changing environmental circumstances, ranging from large-scale thermodynamic non-stationarity due to climate change, regional-scale dynamic forcing such as atmospheric blocking, or local land-surface conditions such as soil moisture deficits. Fields of covariates are integrated using approaches from statistical learning theory, accounting for the spatio-temporal correlation inherent in climate data.

Preliminary results: Dynamical forcing patterns as simulated by the earth system model compare well with those obtained from reanalysis data and inform the statistical model in a physically traceable fashion. How well the latter generalises is tested with respect to further simulations of the US CLIVAR Working Group on Large Ensembles. The relevance of different covariates can inform both detection and attribution as well as risk assessment how their respective statistical models can be further refined to account for the influence of physical drivers under present and future climate conditions.

How to cite: Zeder, J. and Fischer, E. M.: Towards a conditional representation of heat wave probability in large ensemble climate model data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7045, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7045, 2021.

EGU21-15649 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Impact of sub-seasonal atmosphere-ocean interactions on extreme event statistics

Matthias Aengenheyster, Sarah Sparrow, Peter Watson, David Wallom, Laure Zanna, and Myles Allen

Modified frequencies and magnitudes of extreme events due to climate change can have large impacts on societies and are therefore a key area of current research. Large model ensembles are required to quantify and attribute changes to extreme events. Until now, the large ensembles used for such studies are commonly atmosphere-only models forced with time-varying sea surface temperatures (SST) and sea ice. 

This approach is very powerful but presents problems of internal physical consistency. In an SST-forced model, the ocean acts as having an infinite heat capacity whereas in the real-world SST emerges dynamically from the interaction of atmospheric and oceanic processes (Dong et al., 2020). This is particularly relevant for the North Atlantic where ocean processes, in particular meridional heat transport, are key drivers of air-sea coupling. A long-standing challenge, however, is the computational cost of spinning up fully coupled atmosphere-ocean models that hinders their application to large-ensemble, high-resolution simulations required to quantify changing hazard frequencies of low-probability events.  

In this work we combine the HadAM4 (Webb et al., 2001) atmospheric model at N144 resolution with a Slab ocean (Hewitt & Mitchell, 1997; Williams et al., 2003), which includes a simple sea ice model, to yield the atmosphere-Slab Ocean model HadSM4. The Slab Ocean is forced with diagnosed heat convergence (Q-Flux) and surface currents for sea ice advection (a useful model-development finding for this kind of experiment is that including sea ice velocity information from reanalyses in the surface current field yields a substantially improved spatial pattern of sea ice). We are therefore able to directly compare SST-forced atmosphere-only runs with Q-Flux-forced runs where SST is an emergent property of the model, specifically accounting for the passive response of SSTs in the North Atlantic. Using the distributed infrastructure of climateprediction.net (Guillod et al., 2017; Massey et al., 2015) we run large ensembles to compare extreme statistics and quantify the importance of fast ocean-atmosphere coupling for extreme event statistics.

We further use this large ensemble setup to investigate the dynamics that drive extreme events from the ocean through air-sea interaction to atmospheric processes. We address is whether and how the slope of a return-time plot (related to the scale parameter of a GEV distribution) is affected by atmosphere-ocean interactions, since this statistic plays a central role in determining relative-risk estimates in event attribution studies. We then investigate how a perturbation to the Q-Flux, representing a change in ocean heat transport, propagates through the system and alters the statistics of extreme events.

Dong et al., 2020, Climate Dynamics, 55(5–6), 1225–1245. 

Guillod et al., 2017, Geoscientific Model Development, 10(5), 1849–1872. 

Hewitt & Mitchell, 1997, Climate Dynamics, 13(11), 821–834.

Massey et al., 2015, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 141(690), 1528–1545. 

Webb et al., 2001, Climate Dynamics, 17(12), 905–922. 

Williams et al., 2003, Climate Dynamics, 20(7–8), 705–721. 

How to cite: Aengenheyster, M., Sparrow, S., Watson, P., Wallom, D., Zanna, L., and Allen, M.: Impact of sub-seasonal atmosphere-ocean interactions on extreme event statistics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15649, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15649, 2021.

EGU21-3 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

A Methodology for Attributing the Role of Climate Change in Extreme Events: A Global Spectrally Nudged Storyline

Linda van Garderen, Frauke Feser, and Theodore G. Shepherd

Extreme weather events are generally associated with unusual dynamical conditions, yet the signal-to-noise ratio of the dynamical aspects of climate change that are relevant to extremes appears to be small, and the nature of the change can be highly uncertain. On the other hand, the thermodynamic aspects of climate change are already largely apparent from observations, and are far more certain since they are anchored in agreed-upon physical understanding. The storyline method of extreme event attribution, which has been gaining traction in recent years, quantitatively estimates the magnitude of thermodynamic aspects of climate change, given the dynamical conditions. There are different ways of imposing the dynamical conditions. Here we present and evaluate a method where the dynamical conditions are enforced through global spectral nudging towards reanalysis data of the large-scale vorticity and divergence in the free atmosphere, leaving the lower atmosphere free to respond. We simulate the historical extreme weather event twice: first in the world as we know it, with the events occurring on a background of a changing climate, and second in a ‘counterfactual’ world, where the background is held fixed over the past century. We describe the methodology in detail, and present results for the European 2003 heatwave and the Russian 2010 heatwave as a proof of concept. These show that the conditional attribution can be performed with a high signal-to-noise ratio on daily timescales and at local spatial scales. Our methodology is thus potentially highly useful for realistic stress testing of resilience strategies for climate impacts, when coupled to an impact model.

How to cite: van Garderen, L., Feser, F., and Shepherd, T. G.: A Methodology for Attributing the Role of Climate Change in Extreme Events: A Global Spectrally Nudged Storyline, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3, 2021.

EGU21-5731 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Forecast-based attribution of a winter heatwave within the limit of predictability

Nicholas Leach, Antje Weisheimer, Myles Allen, and Timothy Palmer

Between the 21st and 27th February 2019, climatologically exceptional warm temperature anomalies of 10-15 °C were experienced throughout Northern and Western Europe. In particular, the 25th - 27th February saw record-breaking temperatures measured at many weather stations over wide areas of Iberia, France, the British Isles, the Netherlands, Germany and Southern Sweden. 

This heatwave was well-predicted by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) ensemble prediction system. Their forecasts indicated "extreme" heat was possible at a lead time of around two weeks, and likely at a lead time of around ten days. The performance of these forecasts in predicting the surface heat is also reflected in their ability to predict the synoptic situation. 

We exploit this successful forecast to perform an attribution analysis of the heatwave that differs from "conventional" analyses in several key regards. Firstly, we are not only confident that the model used is able to simulate the event in question; but that we are unequivocally studying the specific winter heatwave that occurred in Europe during February 2019. 

This analysis is carried out using a state-of-the-art coupled high-resolution forecast model ensemble, as opposed to the prescribed-SST experiments within climate model ensembles traditionally used for attribution.

A crucial distinction between the typical climate model simulations used for attribution and the forecasts used here is that the climate model simulations are usually allowed to spin out for a sufficient length of time such that they have no memory of their initial conditions; an ensemble constructed in this way will therefore be representative of the climatology of the model (possibly conditioned on any prescribed-SST patterns). Unlike these climatological simulations, the successful forecasts used here are clearly heavily dependent on the initial conditions used. Within these simulations, the level of dynamical conditioning can therefore be specified by altering the lead time from initialisation to the event in question. We explore the implications of this aspect of forecast-based attribution, attempting to integrate between the "conventional" climatological and "storyline" frameworks of attribution. 

To simplify the interpretation of our experiments, here we have decided to only change a single feature between our factual and counterfactual experiments. The analysis presented is therefore limited to attributing the impact of diabatic heating due to increased CO2 concentrations above pre-industrial levels just over the days between the model initialisation date and the event. We carry out simulations at four different lead times from the event, allowing us to investigate the balance between the level of conditioning of the ensemble and the relaxation of the ensemble toward a new equilibrium at the lowered CO2 concentrations.

How to cite: Leach, N., Weisheimer, A., Allen, M., and Palmer, T.: Forecast-based attribution of a winter heatwave within the limit of predictability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5731, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5731, 2021.

EGU21-14636 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

How to combine climate models and observations in event attribution?

Yoann Robin and Aurélien Ribes

We describe a statistical method to derive event attribution diagnoses combining climate model simulations and observations. We fit nonstationary Generalized Extreme Value (GEV) distributions to extremely hot temperatures from an ensemble of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 (CMIP)
models. In order to select a common statistical model, we discuss which GEV parameters have to be nonstationary and which do not. Our tests suggest that the location and scale parameters of GEV distributions should be considered nonstationary. Then, a multimodel distribution is constructed and constrained by observations using a Bayesian method. This new method is applied to the July 2019 French heatwave. Our results show that
both the probability and the intensity of that event have increased significantly in response to human influence.
Remarkably, we find that the heat wave considered might not have been possible without climate change. Our
results also suggest that combining model data with observations can improve the description of hot temperature
distribution.

How to cite: Robin, Y. and Ribes, A.: How to combine climate models and observations in event attribution?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14636, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14636, 2021.

EGU21-12487 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Development of a common definition approach for multi-event attribution of fire weather extremes

Zhongwei Liu, Jonathan Eden, Bastien Dieppois, and Matthew Blackett

In response to the occurrence of large wildfire events across both hemispheres in recent years, the effort to understand the extent to which climate change may be altering the frequency of fire-conducive meteorological conditions has become an emerging subfield of attribution science. However, to date, the relative paucity of wildfire attribution studies, coupled with limited observational records, makes it difficult to draw solid and collective conclusions to better inform forest management strategies. The inter-study differences that emerge due to the choice of methodology and event definition are common to many attribution studies; for wildfire attribution in particular, the lack of consensus on how fire danger should be defined in a meteorological context presents an additional challenge.

Here, we present a framework for the simultaneous attribution of multiple extreme fire weather episodes of using an empirical-statistical methodology. Key to this framework is the development of a common spatiotemporal definition for extreme fire weather events. With reference to the fourth version of Global Fire Emissions Dataset (GFED4), we focus on all parts of the world that have experienced fires during the period 1995-2016. At each target grid point, we fit a Generalized Extreme Value (GEV) distribution, scaled by global mean surface temperature (smoothed over 4 years), to the annual maxima of a series of reanalysis-derived fire danger indicators (including the fire weather index) for the period 1980-2018. Using global maps of risk ratios and percentage of changes, we quantify the influence of recent global warming on the frequency and magnitude of fire weather extremes according to a common ‘event type’ definition, irrespective of their spatiotemporal occurrence. We subsequently conduct a collective attribution analysis of a series of recent exceptional events. We conclude with suggestions for further application to climate model ensembles and a discussion of the potential of our findings to inform decision-makers and practitioners.

How to cite: Liu, Z., Eden, J., Dieppois, B., and Blackett, M.: Development of a common definition approach for multi-event attribution of fire weather extremes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12487, 2021.

EGU21-5727 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.8

Work towards the near real-time attribution of extreme weather and climate events at the German weather service (Deutscher Wetterdienst)

Jordis Tradowsky, Philip Lorenz, Frank Kreienkamp, and Amalie Skålevåg

The interest in statements about the impact of climate change on a specific extreme weather or climate event is largest in the immediate aftermath of an event. The wider public and other stakeholder would like to know, ideally within days after an event occurred, if and how anthropogenic climate change has altered the frequency and severity of such an extreme event. While the scientific area of event attribution has developed quickly within the last decade, providing attribution statements shortly after the event is still a challenge.

To satisfy the public’s need for information, several groups are currently working towards a near real-time attribution system. As part of module B1.2 of the German ClimXtreme project, we are working on a prototype for a semi-automated attribution system to analyse extreme events affecting Germany. Initially, the focus is on heat waves, droughts, and extreme precipitation events, which have large impacts in Germany.

This attribution system will implement existing methodologies for the probabilistic event attribution and extend them, where required. Collaborations with international colleagues facilitate an ongoing exchange with the growing community specialising in extreme event attribution. A close collaboration with project partners within ClimXtreme will enable us to implement new methodologies from other modules of the ClimXtreme project.

In this presentation, we will give an overview of the scientific and technical approach, as well as the different methodologies that will be part of the prototype attribution system. We will also compare the methodologies and discuss their different benefits.

How to cite: Tradowsky, J., Lorenz, P., Kreienkamp, F., and Skålevåg, A.: Work towards the near real-time attribution of extreme weather and climate events at the German weather service (Deutscher Wetterdienst), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5727, 2021.

CL3.1.9 – Challenges in climate prediction: multiple time-scales and the Earth system dimensions

EGU21-2529 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

Earth system predictions of the carbon sinks and atmospheric CO2 growth: new insights and lessons from DCPP

Tatiana Ilyina, Hongmei Li, Wolfgang Müller, and Aaron Spring

Initialized predictions of near-term future climate have proven successful and predictive power for the global carbon cycle is also emerging. Through extending ESM-based decadal prediction systems, i.e. those contributing to Decadal Climate Prediction Project (DCPP) with the ocean and land carbon cycle components, it becomes possible to establish predictability of the carbon sinks and variations of atmospheric CO2 concentrations. However, such predictions of the global carbon cycle still remain a cutting-edge activity of only a few modeling groups.

On interannual to decadal time-scales, atmospheric CO2 growth rates exhibit pronounced anomalies driven by varying strengths of the land and ocean carbon sinks; these anomalies are linked to climate variability on decadal and interannual time scales. Is it possible to predict if atmospheric CO2 changes slower of faster as expected from changes in emissions? This question is examined in a multi-model framework comprising prediction systems initialized by the observed state of the physical climate. The multi-model framework comprises ESM-based prediction systems that contributed to DCPP within CMIP6, as well as those which run with the CMIP5 forcing.

A predictive skill for the global ocean carbon sink of up to 6 years is found for some models. Longer regional predictability horizons are found across single models. On land, a predictive skill of up to 2 years is primarily maintained in the tropics and extra-tropics enabled by the initialization of the physical climate. Furthermore, anomalies of atmospheric CO2 growth rate inferred from natural variations of the land and ocean carbon sinks are predictable at lead time of 2 years and the skill is limited by the land carbon sink predictability horizon. These predictions of the global carbon cycle and the planet’s breath maintained by variations of atmospheric CO2 are essential to understand where the anthropogenic carbon would go in response to emission reduction efforts addressing global warming mitigation. Such information is useful to verify the effectiveness of fossil fuel emissions reduction measures.

How to cite: Ilyina, T., Li, H., Müller, W., and Spring, A.: Earth system predictions of the carbon sinks and atmospheric CO2 growth: new insights and lessons from DCPP, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2529, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2529, 2021.

EGU21-12737 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Can a model weighting scheme be used to obtain skillful, reliable and  seamless climate information for the next 1-40 years?

Antje Weisheimer, Daniel J. Befort, Lukas Brunner, Leonard F. Borchert, Andrew P. Ballinger, Christopher H. O'Reilly, Gabi Hegerl, and Juliette Mignot

Skillful, reliable and seamless climate information for the next 1-40 years is crucial for policy- and other decision makers to develop suitable planning strategies. This poses a challenge for the scientific community, which is split up into the prediction community (developing initialized predictions up to multi-annual time scales, e.g. 10 years), and the climate projection community (providing long-term projections). As predictions are initialized with the observed climate state at the start of the integration, they are often more skillful for lead times of a few years (depending on variable and region) compared to uninitialized climate projections, which can provide information beyond 10 years. Thus, most useful climate information for the next 1-40 years would likely need to draw upon information from both sources. However, temporal merging from different sources is challenging, e.g., it can lead to discontinuities in the central estimates at the respective transition points, which pose problems for interpretation and communication alike.

The aim of this study is to explore if skillful and seamless climate information can be provided by applying a model weighting scheme to initialized decadal predictions and projections. The model specific weights are based on the respective past model performance compared to observations. Whereas for climate projections each model is assigned a single weight, for initialized decadal predictions these weights are calculated for each forecast year separately. Here, we apply the weighting technique to CMIP6 decadal predictions and climate projections from 8 different models. 



How to cite: Weisheimer, A., Befort, D. J., Brunner, L., Borchert, L. F., Ballinger, A. P., O'Reilly, C. H., Hegerl, G., and Mignot, J.: Can a model weighting scheme be used to obtain skillful, reliable and  seamless climate information for the next 1-40 years?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12737, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12737, 2021.

EGU21-15110 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Reconstructions and predictions of the global carbon cycle with an emission-driven Earth System Model

Hongmei Li, Tatiana Ilyina, Tammas Loughran, and Julia Pongratz

The global carbon budget including CO2 fluxes among different reservoirs and atmospheric carbon growth rate vary substantially in interannual to decadal time-scales. Reconstructing and predicting the variable global carbon cycle is of essential value of tracing the fate of carbon and the corresponding climate and ecosystem changes. For the first time, we extend our prediction system based on the Max Planck Institute Earth system model (MPI-ESM) from concentration-driven to emission-driven taking into account the interactive carbon cycle and hence enabling prognostic atmospheric carbon increment. 

By assimilating atmospheric and oceanic observational data products into MPI-ESM decadal prediction system, we can reproduce the observed variations of the historical global carbon cycle globally. The reconstruction from the fully coupled model enables quantification of global carbon budget within a close Earth system and therefore avoids the budget imbalance term of budgeting the carbon with standalone models. Our reconstructions of carbon budget provide a novel approach for supporting global carbon budget and understanding the dominating processes. Retrospective predictions based on the  emission-driven hindcasts, which are initiated from the reconstructions, show predictive skill in the atmospheric carbon growth rate, air-sea CO2 fluxes, and air-land CO2 fluxes. The air-sea CO2 fluxes have higher predictive skill up to 5 years, and the air-land CO2 fluxes and atmospheric carbon growth rate show predictive skill of 2 years. Our results also suggest predictions based on Earth system models enable reproducing and further predicting the evolution of atmospheric CO2 concentration changes. The earth system predictions will provide valuable inputs for understanding the global carbon cycle and supporting climate relevant policy development. 

How to cite: Li, H., Ilyina, T., Loughran, T., and Pongratz, J.: Reconstructions and predictions of the global carbon cycle with an emission-driven Earth System Model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15110, 2021.

EGU21-15116 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Impact of initialization techniques on the predictive skill of Arctic-Atlantic region in the Norwegian Climate Prediction Model (NorCPM)

Leilane Passos, Helene R. Langehaug, Marius Årthun, Tor Eldevik, Ingo Bethke, and Madlen Kimmriz

Society's need for operational climate forecast on seasonal to decadal time scales means an increased effort to improve climate prediction models. One way to address this issue is to investigate how initialization techniques affect the predictive skill in these systems.

Considering this, three implementations and two versions of the Norwegian Climate Prediction Model (NorCPM) are analyzed concerning the effects of different initialization methods on the predictive skill in the Arctic-Atlantic region from interannual to decadal time scales. We consider aspects as data assimilation (DA) in the surface vs subsurface, DA update of sea-ice, CMIP5 vs CMIP6 NorCPM versions, ensemble size, and initialization frequency. Besides that, a comparison between the predictive skill in the Norwegian Sea (NS) and the Subpolar North Atlantic Ocean (SPNA) is performed to identify characteristics that can help to improve predictions in these areas.

The additional assimilation of subsurface data increases the predictive skill in the SPNA at all lead times (1-10 years). In contrast, in the NS the skill is increased just at medium lead times (4-7 years). The strongly coupled DA, updating both ocean and sea ice, increases the predictive skill in the SPNA at all lead times, whereas the weakly coupled DA method, only updating ocean, results in higher skill in the NS at shorter (1-3 years) and medium (4-7 years) lead times. With respect to the NorCPM versions, the CMIP5 versions show higher predictive skill in both areas than the CMIP6 ones. In this comparison, besides the differences in the climate forcings, the new NorCPM version contributing to CMIP6 has minor code modifications, addition of interactive aerosol-cloud schemes, and an ocean component with biogeochemistry. Because of that, it is not possible to isolate just the effect of the climate forcings on the skill. Regarding the ensemble size and initialization frequency, NorCPM had a non-linear response; the skill varies with the area, variable, and lead times.

Considering the results, no single version was superior to the others with respect to the skill. In the SPNA, the CMIP5 version, assimilating both surface and subsurface observations, and using strongly coupled DA, shows the highest skill. In the NS, we find the similar except that the highest skill is shown for the weakly coupled DA. Further investigation about technical aspects and the representation of dynamical process are necessary to better understand why the sea ice updating in the strongly coupled method is not beneficial to the NS.

How to cite: Passos, L., R. Langehaug, H., Årthun, M., Eldevik, T., Bethke, I., and Kimmriz, M.: Impact of initialization techniques on the predictive skill of Arctic-Atlantic region in the Norwegian Climate Prediction Model (NorCPM), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15116, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15116, 2021.

EGU21-2951 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

Multi-year predictability of Colorado River water supply using a drift-free decadal climate prediction system

Yoshimitsu Chikamoto, Simon Wang, Matt Yost, Larissa Yocom, and Robert Gillies

Skillful multi-year climate forecasts provide crucial information for decision-makers and resource managers to mitigate water scarcity. Yet, such forecasts remain challenging due to unpredictable weather noise and the lack of dynamical model capability. In this research, we demonstrate that the annual water supply of the Colorado River in the United States is predictable up to several years in advance by a drift-free decadal climate prediction system using a fully coupled climate model. Observational analyses and model experiments show that prolonged shortages of water supply in the Colorado River are significantly linked to sea surface temperature precursors, including tropical Pacific cooling, North Pacific warming, and southern tropical Atlantic warming. In the Colorado River basin, the water deficits can reduce crop yield and increase wildfire potential. Thus, a multi-year prediction of severe water shortages in the Colorado River basin could be useful as an early indicator of subsequent agricultural loss and wildfire risk.

How to cite: Chikamoto, Y., Wang, S., Yost, M., Yocom, L., and Gillies, R.: Multi-year predictability of Colorado River water supply using a drift-free decadal climate prediction system, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2951, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2951, 2021.

EGU21-1435 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Subseasonal prediction of springtime Pacific-North American transport using upper-level wind forecasts

John R. Albers, Amy H. Butler, Melissa L. Breeden, Andrew O. Langford, and George N. Kiladis

Mass transport is important to many aspects of Pacific-North American climate, including stratosphere-to-troposphere transport of ozone to the planetary boundary layer, which has negative impacts on human health, and water vapor transport, which contributes to precipitation variability. Here, subseasonal forecasts (forecasts 3-6 weeks into the future) of Pacific jet variability are used to predict stratosphere-to-troposphere transport (STT) and tropical-to-extratropical moisture exports (TME) during boreal spring over the Pacific-North American region. To do this, we consider a very simple conditional probability: if 200 hPa zonal winds have a high (positive or negative) loading on a particular 200 hPa Pacific basin zonal wind pattern, then what will the corresponding shift in the probability of STT or TME be during those time periods? We first answer this question in the context of a retrospective analysis, which allows us to understand the regionality of STT and TME for different jet patterns. Then, using the retrospective results as a guide, we utilize zonal wind hindcasts from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Integrated Forecasting System (taken from the S2S Prediction Project) to test whether STT and TME over specific geographic regions may be predictable for subseasonal forecast leads (weeks 3-6). For both analyses, STT and TME are taken from the ETH-Zürich Feature-based climatology database, which allows us to apply a single, self-consistent measure of transport for both the retrospective (1979-2016) and hindcast (1997-2016) analysis periods.

We find that large anomalies in STT to the mid-troposphere over the North Pacific, TME to the west coast of the United States, and TME over Japan are found to have the best potential for subseasonal predictability using upper-level wind forecasts. STT to the planetary boundary layer over the intermountain west of the United States is also potentially predictable for subseasonal leads, but likely only in the context of shifts in the probability of extreme events. While STT and TME forecasts match verifications quite well in terms of spatial structure and anomaly sign, the number of anomalous transport days is underestimated compared to observations. The underestimation of the number of anomalous transport days exhibits a strong seasonal cycle, which becomes progressively worse as spring progresses into summer.

How to cite: Albers, J. R., Butler, A. H., Breeden, M. L., Langford, A. O., and Kiladis, G. N.: Subseasonal prediction of springtime Pacific-North American transport using upper-level wind forecasts, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1435, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1435, 2021.

EGU21-5725 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

Seasonal prediction of European Summer Heatwaves

Chloé Prodhomme, Stefano Materia, Constantin Ardilouze, Rachel H. White, Lauriane Batté, Virginie Guemas, Georgios Fragkoulidis, and Javier Garcia Serrano

Under the influence of global warming, heatwaves are becoming a major threat in many parts of the world, affecting human health and mortality, food security, forest fires, biodiversity, energy consumption, as well as the production and transportation networks. Seasonal forecasting is a promising tool to help mitigate these impacts on society. Previous studies have highlighted some predictive capacity of seasonal forecast systems for specific strong heatwaves such as those of 2003 and 2010. To our knowledge, this study is thus the first of its kind to systematically  assess the prediction skill of heatwaves over Europe in a state-of-the-art seasonal forecast system. One major prerequisite to do so is to appropriately define heatwaves. Existing heatwave indices, built to measure heatwave duration and severity, are often designed for specific impacts and thus have limited robustness for an analysis of heatwave variability. In this study, we investigate the seasonal prediction skill of summer heatwave propensity in the ECMWF System 5 operational forecast system (SEAS5) by means of several dedicated metrics as well as its added-value compared to a simple statistical model. We are able to show, for the first time, that seasonal forecasts initialized in early May can provide potentially useful information of summer heatwave propensity.

How to cite: Prodhomme, C., Materia, S., Ardilouze, C., White, R. H., Batté, L., Guemas, V., Fragkoulidis, G., and Garcia Serrano, J.: Seasonal prediction of European Summer Heatwaves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5725, 2021.

EGU21-13462 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Seasonal prediction in northern Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Seas

Noel Keenlyside, Sunil Pariyar, Ingo Bethke, Yiguo Wang, and Francois Counillon

Recent operational systems are able to predict sea surface temperature (SST) on seasonal timescales in the extra-tropical North Atlantic and Nordic Seas to a high-degree and as high as in the tropical Pacific. While prediction on multi-year timescales is well documented, the source of the high skill on seasonal timescales is unclear and somewhat unexpected. Here, using the Norwegian Climate Prediction model, we show that the skill on seasonal timescales is associated primarily with low-frequency variability (timescales longer than five years). Consistently, there is high skill in predicting SST anomalies six seasons in advance, although there is a skill drop across boreal summer that seems associated with reduced vertical mixing. External forcing and initialized ocean variability contribute similarly to skill on seasonal timescales, as assessed through a heat budget analysis. Skill on these timescales can benefit fisheries and aqua culture.

How to cite: Keenlyside, N., Pariyar, S., Bethke, I., Wang, Y., and Counillon, F.: Seasonal prediction in northern Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Seas, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13462, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13462, 2021.

EGU21-15185 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Seasonal predictability of Mediterranean Weather Regimes in the Copernicus C3S Systems

Ignazio Giuntoli, Federico Fabiano, and Susanna Corti

Seasonal predictions in the Mediterranean region have relevant socio-economic implications, especially in the context of a changing climate. To date, sources of predictability have not been sufficiently investigated at the seasonal scale in this region. To fill this gap, we explore sources of predictability using a weather regimes (WRs) framework. The role of WRs in influencing regional weather patterns in the climate state has generated interest in assessing the ability of climate models to reproduce them.

We identify four Mediterranean WRs for the winter (DJF) season and explore their sources of predictability looking at teleconnections with sea surface
temperature (SST). In particular, we assess how SST anomalies affect the WRs frequencies during winter focussing on the two WRs that are associated with the teleconnections in which the signal is more intense: the Meridional and the Anticyclonic regimes . These sources of predictability are sought in five state-of-the-art seasonal forecasting systems included in the Copernicus Climate Change Services (C3S) suite finding a weaker signal but an overall good agreement with reanalysis data. Finally, we assess the ability of the C3S models in reproducing the reanalysis data WRs frequencies finding that their moderate skill improves during ENSO intense years, indicating that this teleconnection is well reproduced by the models and yields improved predictability in the Mediterranean region.

How to cite: Giuntoli, I., Fabiano, F., and Corti, S.: Seasonal predictability of Mediterranean Weather Regimes in the Copernicus C3S Systems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15185, 2021.

EGU21-10185 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Assessment of Météo-France current seasonal forecasting system S7 and outlook on the upcoming S8

Jean-François Guérémy, Clotilde Dubois, Christian Viel, Laurent Dorel, Constantin Ardilouze, Lauriane Batte, Jacques Richon, Yiwen Xu, Fleur Nicolay, Jean-Michel Soubeyroux, and Morgane Le Breton

In the framework of the EU Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) program, a new coupled system has been developed at Météo-France (MF) to carry out seasonal forecasts at a 7-month range. This system (called S7) is in operation in real time since October 2019. S7 is based upon the MF coupled climate model CNRM-CM6 used for CMIP6 simulations, in its high resolution configuration: ARPEGE-Climat (Tl359-0.5° l91, including different tuning choices for the physics), NEMO 3.6 (0.25° l75) and the OASIS coupler. The aim of this presentation is twofold.

First, an assessment of S7 performance will be presented in terms of biases, and both deterministic and probabilistic predictability scores. A comparison with the earlier MF system and the current ECMWF system will be shown.

Second, incremental updates from S7 to S8, to be in operation in June 2021, will be presented and assessed versus S7. The upgrade includes a larger atmospheric resolution from l91 to l137, together with a coupled initialization strategy to replace the earlier independent atmospheric and oceanic initialization.

How to cite: Guérémy, J.-F., Dubois, C., Viel, C., Dorel, L., Ardilouze, C., Batte, L., Richon, J., Xu, Y., Nicolay, F., Soubeyroux, J.-M., and Le Breton, M.: Assessment of Météo-France current seasonal forecasting system S7 and outlook on the upcoming S8, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10185, 2021.

EGU21-10100 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

Skillful seasonal prediction of North American summer hot days

Liwei Jia, Tom Delworth, Sarah Kapnick, Xiaosong Yang, Nathaniel Johnson, William Cooke, Feiyu Lu, Matthew Harrison, Anthony Rosati, Fanrong Zeng, Colleen McHugn, Michell Bushuk, Yongfei Zhang, Andrew Witternberg, Liping Zhang, Hiroyuki Murakami, and Kai-chi Tseng

This study shows that the frequency of North American summer hot days are skillfully predictable months in advance in the newly-developed GFDL (Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory) SPEAR (Seamless System for Prediction and EArth System Research) seasonal forecast system. We also demonstrate that climate change, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and atmosphere-land feedback all contribute to the seasonal predictive skill of the frequency of North American summer hot days. Using a statistical optimization method (Average Predictability Time) we identify two large-scale components of the frequency of North American summer hot days that are predictable with significant correlation skill. One component shows an increase in the frequency of summer hot days everywhere over North America and is highly predictable at least 9 months in advance. This component is related to a secular warming trend. Another predictable component shows largest loadings over the central U.S., and is significantly predictable 6 months ahead. This second component is related to the PDO and the AMO, and is significantly correlated with the central U.S. soil water. These findings have potential implications for predictions of North American summer hot days on seasonal time scales.

How to cite: Jia, L., Delworth, T., Kapnick, S., Yang, X., Johnson, N., Cooke, W., Lu, F., Harrison, M., Rosati, A., Zeng, F., McHugn, C., Bushuk, M., Zhang, Y., Witternberg, A., Zhang, L., Murakami, H., and Tseng, K.: Skillful seasonal prediction of North American summer hot days, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10100, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10100, 2021.

EGU21-11019 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Skill assessment of post-processing methods for ECMWF SEAS5 seasonal forecasts over Europe

Alice Crespi, Marcello Petitta, Lucas Grigis, Paola Marson, Jean-Michel Soubeyroux, and Christian Viel

Seasonal forecasts provide information on climate conditions several months ahead and therefore they could represent a valuable support for decision making, warning systems as well as for the optimization of industry and energy sectors. However, forecast systems can be affected by systematic biases and have horizontal resolutions which are typically coarser than the spatial scales of the practical applications. For this reason, the reliability of forecasts needs to be carefully assessed before applying and interpreting them for specific applications. In addition, the use of post-processing approaches is recommended in order to improve the representativeness of the large-scale predictions of regional and local climate conditions. The development and evaluation downscaling and bias-correction procedures aiming at improving the skills of the forecasts and the quality of derived climate services is currently an open research field. In this context, we evaluated the skills of ECMWF SEAS5 forecasts of monthly mean temperature, total precipitation and wind speed over Europe and we assessed the skill improvements of calibrated predictions.

For the calibration, we combined a bilinear interpolation and a quantile mapping approach to obtain corrected monthly forecasts on a 0.25°x0.25° grid from the original 1°x1° values. The forecasts were corrected against the reference ERA5 reanalysis over the hindcast period 1993–2016. The processed forecasts were compared over the same domain and period with another calibrated set of ECMWF SEAS5 forecasts obtained by the ADAMONT statistical method.

The skill assessment was performed by means of both deterministic and probabilistic verification metrics evaluated over seasonal forecasted aggregations for the first lead time. Greater skills of the forecast systems in Europe were generally observed in spring and summer, especially for temperature, with a spatial distribution varying with the seasons. The calibration was proved to effectively correct the model biases for all variables, however the metrics not accounting for bias did not show significant improvements in most cases, and in some areas and seasons even small degradations in skills were observed.

The presented study supported the activities of the H2020 European project SECLI-FIRM on the improvement of the seasonal forecast applicability for energy production, management and assessment.

How to cite: Crespi, A., Petitta, M., Grigis, L., Marson, P., Soubeyroux, J.-M., and Viel, C.: Skill assessment of post-processing methods for ECMWF SEAS5 seasonal forecasts over Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11019, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11019, 2021.

EGU21-6870 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

CMIP6 multi-model projection of summer season expansion over the Northern Hemisphere land areas

Bo-Joung Park and Seung-Ki Min

Due to the ongoing robust global warming, summer season is expected to get warmer in future over the Northern Hemisphere (NH) land areas. This study examined how the summer season defined by local temperature-based thresholds would change during the 21st century under Shared Socioeconomic Pathway scenarios (SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5) using Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6) multiple model simulations. The projection results relative to the current climatology (1995-2014) indicate the significant advance of summer onset and delay of withdrawal over all NH land areas except high latitude locations, with longer than 10 days of summer expansion even in the weakest scenario (SSP1-2.6) in the near-term future (2021-2040). The advance and delay of summer season timing become stronger in the mid-term (2041-2060) and long-term (2081-2020) future periods, ranging from about 10 days to a month depending on SSP scenarios. Largest summer expansion is observed in the middle latitudes, including Europe in high latitude, while the weakest changes are seen over North Asia. Canadian Arctic region is characterized by an asymmetric change with a small advance of summer onset but a relatively large delay in summer ending. CMIP6 models exhibit large inter-model differences, which increase from near-term to long-term future periods. Western North Asia region display larger inter-model difference in summer onset projections while Europe has the largest inter-model spread of summer withdrawal changes. Physical mechanisms associated with these regional and timing-dependent changes in the future summer season lengthening will be further examined.

How to cite: Park, B.-J. and Min, S.-K.: CMIP6 multi-model projection of summer season expansion over the Northern Hemisphere land areas, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6870, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6870, 2021.

EGU21-13330 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Recent development of a supermodel - an interactive multi-model ensemble

Shuo Wang, Francois Counillon, Shunya Koseki, Noel Keenlyside, Alok Kumar Gupta, and Maolin Shen

An interactive multi-model ensemble (named as supermodel) based on three state-of-the-art earth system models (i.e., NorESM, MPIESM and CESM) is developed. The models are synchronized every month by data assimilation. The data assimilation method used is the Ensemble Optimal Interpolation (EnOI) scheme, for which the covariance matrix is constructed from a historical ensemble. The assimilated data is a weighted combination of the monthly output sea surface temperature (SST) of these individual models, but the full ocean state is constrained by the covariance matrix. The synchronization of the models during the model simulation makes this approach different from the traditional multi-model ensemble approach in which model outputs are combined a-posteriori.

We compare the different approaches to estimate the supermodel weights: equal weights, spatially varying weights based on the minimisation of the bias. The performance of these supermodels is compared to that of the individual models, and multi-model ensemble for the period 1980 to 2006. SST synchronisation is achieved in most oceans and in dynamical regimes such as ENSO. The supermodel with spatially varying weights overperforms the supermodel with equal weights. It reduces the SST bias by over 30% compare to the multi-model ensemble. The temporal variability of the supermodel is slightly on the low side but improved compared to the multi-model ensemble. The simulations are being extended to 2100 to assess the simulation of climate variability and climate change. Performing prediction experiments with the supermodel is the main perspective in the next step.  

How to cite: Wang, S., Counillon, F., Koseki, S., Keenlyside, N., Gupta, A. K., and Shen, M.: Recent development of a supermodel - an interactive multi-model ensemble, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13330, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13330, 2021.

EGU21-7717 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Reduced global warming from CMIP6 projections when weighting models by performance and independence

Lukas Brunner, Angeline G. Pendergrass, Flavio Lehner, Anna L. Merrifield, Ruth Lorenz, and Reto Knutti

To extract reliable estimates of future warming and related uncertainties from multi model ensembles such as CMIP6, the spread in their projections is often translated into probabilistic estimates such as the mean and likely range. Here, we use a model weighting approach, which accounts for the CMIP6 models' historical performance as well as their interdependence, to calculate constrained distributions of global mean temperature change.

We investigate the skill of our approach in a perfect model test framework, where we use previous-generation CMIP5 models as pseudo-observations in the historical period. The performance of the distribution weighted in the abovementioned manner with respect to matching the pseudo-observations in the future is then evaluated, and we find a mean increase in skill of about 17 % compared with the unweighted distribution. In addition, we show that our independence metric correctly clusters models known to be similar based on a CMIP6 “family tree”, which enables the application of a weighting based on the degree of inter-model dependence.

We then apply the weighting approach, based on two observational estimates, to constrain CMIP6 projections. Our results show a reduction in the projected mean warmingbecause some CMIP6 models with high future warming receive systematically lower performance weights. The mean of end-of-century warming (2081–2100 relative to 1995–2014) for SSP5-8.5 with weighting is 3.7°C, compared with 4.1°C without weighting; the likely (66%) uncertainty range is 3.1 to 4.6°C, which equates to a 13 % decrease in spread.



How to cite: Brunner, L., Pendergrass, A. G., Lehner, F., Merrifield, A. L., Lorenz, R., and Knutti, R.: Reduced global warming from CMIP6 projections when weighting models by performance and independence, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7717, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7717, 2021.

EGU21-9387 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

A multi-model ensemble weighting method (ClimWIP) in ESMValTool

Ruth Lorenz, Lukas Brunner, Peter Kalverla, Stef Smeets, Jaro Camphuijsen, and Bouwe Andela

Too often model evaluation has no impact on how a multi-model ensemble is analysed. It has been argued that projection and prediction uncertainties can be decreased by giving more weight to those models in multi-model ensembles that are more skillful and realistic for a specific process or application. In addition, some models in multi-model ensembles are not independent and it is not always clear how to include available initial condition ensemble members which are becoming larger in number e.g. in CMIP6.

A weighting approach has been proposed which takes into account both of these aspects (Climate model Weighting by Independence and Performance- ClimWIP) and is able to deal with included initial condition ensemble members. This approach has been shown to decrease uncertainties in multiple use cases such as projections of Arctic September sea ice, North American summer maximum temperatures, European temperature and precipitation, as well as projected global mean temperatures. Even though the basic equation to calculate a model's weight is straight forward, the user needs to make several decisions, such as which metric to use to measure performance or independence, which variables to include etc. and potential pitfalls were identified. For the actual implementation a range of points need to be considered: (1) data from different modelling centers need to be processed and compared in a consistent way, (2) the strength of the performance and independence contributions is determined through two parameters that must also be calibrated, (3) results should be provided in a form that allows backtracing to the original data and code to allow reproducability. To facilitate re-use for new applications, the method was recently implemented into the ESMValTool. We will discuss advantages and disadvantages of the method, show results from some of the use cases, explain how the implementation into ESMValTool was done and how the method can now be more easily used.

How to cite: Lorenz, R., Brunner, L., Kalverla, P., Smeets, S., Camphuijsen, J., and Andela, B.: A multi-model ensemble weighting method (ClimWIP) in ESMValTool, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9387, 2021.

EGU21-13473 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9 | Highlight

Is 1.5 °C of global warming inevitable and if so, when?

Sebastian Milinski, Erich Fischer, Piers Forster, John C. Fyfe, June-Yi Lee, Christopher J. Smith, Peter Thorne, Blair Trewin, and Jochem Marotzke

The likelihood of exceeding 1.5 °C of global warming relative to preindustrial depends on the warming observed so far, anthropogenic warming that may occur in the future, and the degree to which internal variability will either temporarily amplify or attenuate future anthropogenic warming.  Here, we introduce a new framework that estimates the likelihood of exceeding 1.5 °C of global warming wherein uncertainties in each one of these factors is explicitly accounted for.

In this new framework, we estimate the historical warming, and its uncertainty, from preindustrial to present using the recently-minted HadCRUT5 dataset. Future anthropogenic warming is estimated using an energy balance model tuned to an assessed range of climate sensitivity and applied to each of the core emissions scenarios (i.e. SSPs) underlying the Sixth Phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). Finally, we estimate the influence of internal variability using a large ensemble of initial condition simulations. On this basis, we find that the largest uncertainty in estimates of the likelihood of exceeding 1.5°C of global warming is due to model-to-model differences in estimates of future anthropogenic warming, followed by historical warming uncertainty, and then uncertainty due to internal variability.

Based on our analysis, we find that the earliest time for crossing 1.5 °C of global warming, here defined as the 5% likelihood, is approximately emissions-scenario independent. We define the 1.5 °C threshold without any overshoot: if a time series warms by more than 1.5 °C during any 20-year period before 2100, it is counted as having crossed 1.5 °C. In each considered scenario except SSP5-8.5, the 20-year average period that crosses the 1.5 °C threshold with a 5% likelihood is 2013 to 2032. On the other hand, the 50% likelihood does depend on the scenario, with the SSP5-8.5 crossing occurring in 2018 to 2037 and SSP1-1.9 crossing in 2022 to 2041. All scenarios except SSP1-1.9 have a likelihood close to 100% to cross 1.5 °C global warming before 2100. Even in SSP1-1.9, the scenario with the strongest emission reductions, there is a 71% likelihood to cross 1.5 °C by the end of this century. This implies that even in SSP1-1.9, the world may stay below 1.5 °C only if both climate sensitivity and historical warming are near the lower end of their respective distributions.

These estimates, with their associated uncertainties, may have major implications for policy decisions.

How to cite: Milinski, S., Fischer, E., Forster, P., Fyfe, J. C., Lee, J.-Y., Smith, C. J., Thorne, P., Trewin, B., and Marotzke, J.: Is 1.5 °C of global warming inevitable and if so, when?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13473, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13473, 2021.

EGU21-12175 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Land-surface feedbacks on temperature and precipitation in CMIP6-LS3MIP projections

Franco Catalano, Andrea Alessandri, Wilhelm May, and Thomas Reerink

The Land Surface, Snow and Soil Moisture Model Intercomparison Project (LS3MIP) aims at diagnosing systematic biases in the land models of CMIP6 Earth System Models and assessing the role of land-atmosphere feedbacks on climate change. Two components of experiments have been designed: the first is devoted to the assessment of the systematic land biases in offline mode (LMIP) while the second component is dedicated to the analysis of the land feedbacks in coupled mode (LFMIP). Here we focus on the LFMIP experiments. In the LFMIP protocol (van den Hurk et al. 2016), which builds upon the GLACE-CMIP configuration, two sets of climate-sensitivity projections have been carried out in amip mode: in the first set (amip-lfmip-pdLC) the land feedbacks to climate change have been disabled by prescribing the soil-moisture states from a climatology derived from “present climate conditions” (1980-2014) while in the second set (amip-lfmip-rmLC) 30-year running mean of land-surface state from the corresponding ScenarioMIP experiment (O’Neill et al., 2016) is prescribed. The two sensitivity simulations span the period 1980-2100 with sea surface temperature and sea-ice conditions prescribed from the first member of historical and ScenarioMIP experiments. Two different scenarios are considered: SSP1-2.6 (f1) and SSP5-8.5 (f2).

In this analysis, we focus on the differences between amip-lfmip-rmLC and amip-lfmip-pdLC at the end of the 21st Century (2071–2100) in order to isolate the impact of the soil moisture changes on surface climate change. The (2071-2100) minus (1985-2014) temperature change is positive everywhere over land and the climate change signal of precipitation displays a clear intensification of the hydrological cycle in the Northern Hemisphere. Warming and hydrological cycle intensification are larger in SSP5-8.5 scenario. Results show large differences in the feedbacks between wet, transition and semi-arid climates. In particular, over the regions with negative soil moisture change, the 2m-temperature increases significantly while the cooling signal is not significant over all the regions getting wetter. In agreement with Catalano et al. (2016), the larger effects on precipitation due to soil moisture forcing occur mostly over transition zones between dry and wet climates, where evaporation is highly sensitive to soil moisture. The sensitivity of both 2m-temperature and precipitation to soil moisture change is much stronger in the SSP5-8.5 scenario.

How to cite: Catalano, F., Alessandri, A., May, W., and Reerink, T.: Land-surface feedbacks on temperature and precipitation in CMIP6-LS3MIP projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12175, 2021.

EGU21-13557 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Performance evaluation of bias adjustment methods for wave climate projections in the Mediterranean Sea

Andrea Lira Loarca and Giovanni Besio

Global and regional climate models are the primary tools to investigate the climate system response to different scenarios and therefore allow to make future projections of different atmospheric variables which are used as input for wave generation models to assess future wave climate. Adequate projections of future wave climate are needed in order to analyze climate change impacts and hazards in coastal areas such as flooding and erosion with waves being the predominant factor with varied temporal variability. 

Bias adjustment methods are commonly used for climate impact variables dealing with systematic errors (biases) found in global and regional climate models.  While bias correction techniques are extended in the climate and hydrological impact modeling scientific communities, there is still a lack of consensus regarding their use in sea climate variables (Parker & Hill, 2017; Lemos et al, 2020; Lira-Loarca et at, 2021)

In these work we assess the performance of different bias-adjustment methods such as the Empirical Gumbel Quantile Mapping (EGQM) method as a standard method which takes into the account the extreme values of the distribution takes, the Distribution Mapping method using Stationary Mixture Distributions (DM-stMix) allowing for a better representation of each variable in the mean regime and tails and the Distribution Mapping method using Non-Stationary Mixture Distributions (DM-nonstMix) as an improved methods which allows to take into account the temporal variability of wave climate according to different baseline periods such as monthly, seasonal, yearly and decadal. The performance of the different bias adjustment methods will be analyzed with particular interest on the futural temporal behavior of wave climate. The advantages and drawbacks of each bias adjustment method as well as their complexity will be discussed.

 

References:

  • Lemos, G., Menendez, M., Semedo, A., Camus, P., Hemer, M., Dobrynin, M., Miranda, P.M.A. (2020). On the need of bias correction methods for wave climate projections, Global and Planetary Change, 186, 103109.
  • Lira-Loarca, A., Cobos, M., Besio, G., Baquerizo, A. (2021) Projected wave climate temporal variability due to climate change. Stoch Environ Res Risk Assess.
  • Parker, K. & Hill, D.F. (2017) Evaluation of bias correction methods for wave modeling output, Ocean Modelling 110, 52-65



How to cite: Lira Loarca, A. and Besio, G.: Performance evaluation of bias adjustment methods for wave climate projections in the Mediterranean Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13557, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13557, 2021.

EGU21-2883 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Climate controlled root zone parameters show potential to improve water flux simulations by land surface models

Fransje van Oorschot, Ruud van der Ent, Andrea Alessandri, and Markus Hrachowitz

The root zone storage capacity (Sr ) is the maximum volume of water in the subsurface that can potentially be accessed by vegetation for transpiration. It influences the seasonality of transpiration as well as fast and slow runoff processes. Many studies have shown that Sr is heterogeneous as controlled by local climate conditions, which affect vegetation strategies in sizing their root system able to support plant growth and to prevent water shortages. Root zone parameterization in most land surface models does not account for this climate control on root development, being based on look-up tables that prescribe worldwide the same root zone parameters for each vegetation class. These look-up tables are obtained from measurements of rooting structure that are scarce and hardly representative of the ecosystem scale. The objective of this research was to quantify and evaluate the effects of a climate-controlled representation of Sr on the  water fluxes modeled by the HTESSEL land surface model. Climate controlled Sr was here estimated with the "memory method" (hereinafter MM) in which Sr is derived from the vegetation's memory of past root zone water storage deficits. Sr,MM was estimated for 15 river catchments over Australia across three contrasting climate regions: tropical, temperate and Mediterranean. Suitable representations of Sr,MM were then implemented in HTESSEL (hereinafter MD) by accordingly modifying the soil depths to obtain a model Sr,MD that matches Sr,MM in the 15 catchments. In the control version of HTESSEL (hereinafter CTR), Sr,CTR was larger than Sr,MM in 14 out of 15 catchments. Furthermore, the variability among the individual catchments of Sr,MM (117—722 mm) was considerably larger than of Sr,CTR (491—725 mm). The HTESSEL MD version resulted in a significant and consistent improvement version of the modeled monthly seasonal climatology (1975--2010) and inter-annual anomalies of river discharge compared with observations. However, the effects on biases in long-term annual mean fluxes were small and mixed. The modeled monthly seasonal climatology of the catchment discharge improved in MD compared to CTR: the correlation with observations increased significantly from 0.84 to 0.90 in tropical catchments, from 0.74 to 0.86 in temperate catchments and from 0.86 to 0.96 in Mediterranean catchments. Correspondingly, the correlations of the inter-annual discharge anomalies improved significantly in MD from 0.74 to 0.78 in tropical catchments, from 0.80 to 0.85 in temperate catchments and from 0.71 to 0.79 in Mediterranean catchments. Based on these results, we believe that a global application of climate controlled root zone parameters has the potential to improve the timing of modeled water fluxes by land surface models, but a significant reduction of biases is not expected. 

How to cite: van Oorschot, F., van der Ent, R., Alessandri, A., and Hrachowitz, M.: Climate controlled root zone parameters show potential to improve water flux simulations by land surface models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2883, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2883, 2021.

EGU21-16465 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Implementing the capability to respond to large volcanic eruptions in the C3S prediction systems

Roberto Bilbao, Magdalena Balmaseda, Lauriane Batte, Markus Donat, Pablo Ortega, Etienne Tourigny, and Tim Stockdale

Explosive volcanic eruptions have climate impacts on seasonal-to-decadal time-scales. Studies have shown that these climate impacts have high predictive potential, and could therefore be exploited to improve operational climate predictions whenever a new explosive volcanic eruption happens. In preparation for such an event, which has occurred three times in the last 60 years, it is necessary to develop the capability to estimate and ingest the associated stratospheric volcanic forcing into the operational seasonal-to-decadal forecasts systems. This is one of the objectives of the H2020 project CONFESS (CONsistent representation of temporal variations of boundary Forcings in reanalysES and Seasonal forecasts), for which the main tasks envisaged are presented herein. The first task involves several technical developments in the IFS (the atmospheric model of the European Center for Medium-range Weather Forecasting) to improve the model representation of volcanic aerosols. Since for a new major volcanic eruption the evolution and distribution of the volcanic aerosols is initially unknown, the second task is to evaluate a method to estimate them based on several assumptions. For this purpose the recently enhanced emulator of volcanic aerosols EVA_H (Aubrey et al., 2019) will be used to produce the stratospheric volcanic aerosol forcing. In a final task, the outputs of the EVA_H module will be validated by producing the forcings of the past volcanic eruptions of Agung, El Chichon and Pinatubo, and the realism of their climate response will be evaluated in seasonal and multi-annual re-forecasts.

How to cite: Bilbao, R., Balmaseda, M., Batte, L., Donat, M., Ortega, P., Tourigny, E., and Stockdale, T.: Implementing the capability to respond to large volcanic eruptions in the C3S prediction systems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16465, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16465, 2021.

EGU21-13456 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.9

Varying Snow and Vegetation Signatures of Surface Albedo Feedback on the Northern Hemisphere Land Warming

Andrea Alessandri, Franco Catalano, Matteo De Felice, Bart van den Hurk, and Gianpaolo Balsamo

Changes in snow and vegetation cover associated with global warming can modify surface albedo (the reflected amount of radiative energy from the sun), therefore modulating the rise of surface temperature that is primarily caused by anthropogenic greenhouse-gases emission. This introduces a series of potential feedbacks to regional warming with positive (negative) feedbacks enhancing (reducing) temperature increase by augmenting (decreasing) the absorption of short-wave radiation. So far our knowledge on the importance and magnitude of these feedbacks has been hampered by the limited availability of relatively long records of continuous satellite observations.

Here we exploit a 31-year (1982-2012) high-frequency observational record of land data to quantify the strength of the surface-albedo feedback on land warming modulated by snow and vegetation during the recent historical period. To distinguish snow and vegetation contributions to this feedback, we examine temporal composites of satellite data in three different Northern Hemisphere domains. The analysis reveals and quantifies markedly different signatures of the surface-albedo feedback. A large positive surface-albedo feedback of +0.87 [CI 95%: 0.68, 1.05] W/(m2∗K) absorbed solar radiation per degree of temperature increase is estimated in the domain where snow dominates. On the other hand the surface-albedo feedback becomes predominantly negative where vegetation dominates: it is largely negative (-0.91 [-0.81, -1.03] W/(m2∗K)) in the domain with vegetation dominating, while it is moderately negative (-0.57 [-0.40, -0.72] W/(m2∗K)) where both vegetation and snow are significantly present.  Snow cover reduction consistently provides a positive feedback on warming. In contrast, vegetation expansion can produce either positive or negative feedbacks in different regions and seasons, depending on whether the underlying surface being replaced has higher (e.g. snow) or lower (e.g. dark soils) albedo than vegetation.

The observational data and analysis from this work is supplying fundamental knowledge to model and predict how the surface-albedo feedback will evolve and affect the rate of regional temperature rise in the future. So far the simulation and prediction of albedo feedbacks shows a large spread and divergence among the available state-of-the-art Earth System Models (ESMs), due to uncertainties in the representation of vegetation-snow processes and the dynamics of vegetation and to uncertainties in land-cover parameters. By exploiting the unprecedented observational benchmarks to evaluate the ESMs currently engaged in CMIP6, this work will allow an improved and better constrained representation of the processes underlying surface albedo feedbacks in the next generation of ESMs. 

This work is in now in Press and Open Access on Environmental Research Letters: https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abd65f

How to cite: Alessandri, A., Catalano, F., De Felice, M., van den Hurk, B., and Balsamo, G.: Varying Snow and Vegetation Signatures of Surface Albedo Feedback on the Northern Hemisphere Land Warming, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13456, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13456, 2021.

CL3.1.10 – Earth resilience and tipping dynamics in the Anthropocene

EGU21-2941 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10 | Highlight

Interactions of climate tipping elements and their associated basin stability in a conceptual model for tipping cascades

Nico Wunderling, Jonathan Donges, Jürgen Kurths, Maximilian Gelbrecht, and Ricarda Winkelmann

With progressing global warming, there is an increased risk that one or several climate tipping elements might cross a critical threshold, resulting in severe consequences for the global climate, ecosystems and human societies. Here, we study a subset of four tipping elements and their interactions in a conceptual and easily extendable framework: the Greenland Ice Sheet, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and the Amazon rainforest.

In a large-scale Monte-Carlo simulation, we explicitly investigate the domino effects triggered by each of the individual tipping elements under global warming in equilibrium experiments. Thereby, we reveal the roles of each of the individual tipping elements in cascading transitions. Further, we perform a comprehensive basin stability analysis to detect the stable states of the interacting system and discuss their associated Earth system resilience. Finally, we analyse whether additional internal temperature feedbacks of the tipping elements might be able to increase the risk of triggering tipping events and cascades.

In our model experiments, we find: (i) the Greenland and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet are often the initiators of tipping cascades, while the AMOC typically takes on the role as a mediator of cascades. (ii) The interactions between the tipping elements considered here overall have a destabilizing effect on the climate system as a whole. (iii) In our model, the large ice sheets are of particular importance for the resilience of the Earth system on long time scales, as found by basin stability measures. (iv) Additional internal temperature feedbacks of the tipping elements can slightly increase the risk of triggering tipping events.

How to cite: Wunderling, N., Donges, J., Kurths, J., Gelbrecht, M., and Winkelmann, R.: Interactions of climate tipping elements and their associated basin stability in a conceptual model for tipping cascades, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2941, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2941, 2021.

EGU21-1832 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

The role of the Microbial Conveyor Belt on Earth´s system resilience

Mireia Mestre and Juan Höfer

Despite being major players on the global biogeochemical cycles, microorganisms are generally not included in holistic views of Earth’s system. The Microbial Conveyor Belt is a conceptual framework that represents a recurrent and cyclical flux of microorganisms across the globe, connecting distant ecosystems and Earth compartments. This long-range dispersion of microorganisms directly influences the microbial biogeography, the global cycling of inorganic and organic matter, and thus the Earth system’s functioning and long-term resilience. Planetary-scale human impacts disrupting the natural flux of microorganisms pose a major threat to the Microbial Conveyor Belt, thus compromising microbial ecosystem services. Perturbations that modify the natural dispersion of microorganisms are, for example, the modification of the intensity/direction of air fluxes and ocean currents due to climate change, the vanishing of certain dispersion vectors (e.g., species extinction or drying rivers) or the introduction of new ones (e.g., microplastics, wildfires). Transdisciplinary approaches are needed to disentangle the Microbial Conveyor Belt, its major threats and their consequences for Earth´s system resilience.

How to cite: Mestre, M. and Höfer, J.: The role of the Microbial Conveyor Belt on Earth´s system resilience, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1832, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1832, 2021.

EGU21-214 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Modeling fisheries as multiscalar human-natural systems

Andrew K. Carlson, Daniel I. Rubenstein, and Simon A. Levin

EGU21-6081 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Concern and anticipation of future sea-level rise increase potential for social tipping interventions

Keith Smith, Marc Wiedermann, Jonathan Donges, Jobst Heitzig, and Ricarda Winkelmann

Effective climate change mitigation necessitates swift societal transformations in order to meet the goals of the Paris Accord and to prevent abrupt, irreversible, transitions in the Earth System. Social tipping processes, where relatively small groups trigger sudden qualitative shifts in collective behaviour have been identified as a potential key mechanism instigating these necessary transformations.  However, the specific processes whereby experienced or anticipated future climate impacts effect large-scale societal changes remain largely unidentified and underrepresented in contemporary Earth System models. Here, we combine output from the MAGICC climate model, country-level social survey data and a low-dimensional network-based threshold model of social tipping to exemplify a transformative pathway in which climate change concern increases the potential for social tipping and extended anticipatory time horizons of future sea level rise shift the system closer towards a critical state whereby interventions, such as emergent social movements or policy change, can ultimately kick the system into a qualitatively different state. While dynamics of climate tipping elements are often reduced to a single control parameter, our findings suggest that such an approach may be inapplicable for social tipping processes, as single parameters alone may not reach critical thresholds required for tipping. Instead, we show that comparatively smaller changes in a set of multiple parameters can suffice to shift a system into its critical state where ephemeral (potentially deliberate) kicks can bring about social tipping. Tipping in the climate system is commonly associated with bifurcations, while social tipping processes are instead more likely induced by sudden events or shocks, where the required magnitudes of such kicks emerge from multiplicative, interacting factors. Effective analyses of such processes therefore requires novel modeling paradigms, specifically accounting for the increased complexity of socio-economic systems.

How to cite: Smith, K., Wiedermann, M., Donges, J., Heitzig, J., and Winkelmann, R.: Concern and anticipation of future sea-level rise increase potential for social tipping interventions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6081, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6081, 2021.

EGU21-13583 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Towards a green water planetary boundary

Lan Wang-Erlandsson, Ruud van der Ent, Arie Staal, Miina Porkka, Arne Tobian, Sofie te Wierik, Ingo Fetzer, Chandrakant Singh, Fernando Jaramillo, Peter Greve, Dieter Gerten, Patrick Keys, Heindriken Dahlmann, Tom Gleeson, Will Steffen, Sarah Cornell, and Johan Rockström

Green water - soil moisture, evaporation, and precipitation over land - is fundamental to safeguard Earth system functioning. Nonlinear green-water driven changes in climate, ecosystems, biogeochemistry, and hydrology are becoming increasingly evident and widespread. Yet, considerations of continental to planetary scale green-water dynamics are yet to be assessed and incorporated in management and governance. Here, we propose a green water planetary boundary (PB) - as part of the planetary boundary framework that demarcates a global “safe-operating space” for humanity - for assessing green-water related changes that can affect the capacity of the Earth system to remain in Holocene-like conditions. We consider green-water related processes associated with all scales: spatially distributed units, regions or biomes, and the Earth system as a whole. The proposed green water PB variable is selected through expert elicitation based on a set of transparent evaluation criteria that consider both scientific and governability aspects. Finally, we clarify the appropriate use of a green water PB, outline remaining challenges, and propose a research agenda for future navigation and quantitative assessments of the biophysical Earth system scale boundaries of green water changes.

How to cite: Wang-Erlandsson, L., van der Ent, R., Staal, A., Porkka, M., Tobian, A., te Wierik, S., Fetzer, I., Singh, C., Jaramillo, F., Greve, P., Gerten, D., Keys, P., Dahlmann, H., Gleeson, T., Steffen, W., Cornell, S., and Rockström, J.: Towards a green water planetary boundary, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13583, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13583, 2021.

UNESCO Biosphere Reserves are model regions for sustainable development per definitionem. Its management is oriented towards meeting the SDGs and to develop practical and innovative solutions on the ground and study interlinkages between global development and local impacts.

Monitoring is thus an essential tool for the effective management of a biosphere reserve. However, resources and capacities at local level are often limited. The authors outline the major conceptual challenges in developing a long-term monitoring system. In the Salzburger Lungau & Carinthian Nockberge UNESCO BR, a BRIM was elaborated between 2011 and 2013 to map the development and performance of the BR based on only 12 indicators. This system allows for collecting data at BR-level to increase the local ability to detect and link long-term social, economic and ecological changes in an easy-to-apply manner. These datasets can provide a valuable contribution to interpret local impacts of global changes and the related impacts of management actions.

The presenters reflect on the practical experiences and outline as well as a way forward towards future options for viable monitoring systems. The presenters assume that the future of biodiversity monitoring will lie in autonomous or semi-autonomous systems. In this context, disruptive technologies (for example, high-resolution remote sensing, bio-acoustics or genetic techniques such as e-DNA , etc.) will play a central role.

Authors:

Michael Jungmeier* und Michael Huber**

* UNESCO Chair for Sustainable Management of Conservation Areas, Carinthia University of Applied Sciences

** E.C.O. Institute of Ecology, Lakeside B07b, 9020 Klagenfurt, Austria

How to cite: Jungmeier, M. and Huber, M.: A low-cost BRIM (Biosphere reserve integrated monitoring)? The example of the Salzburger Lungau & Kärntner Nockberge BR (Austria), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4730, 2021.

EGU21-9962 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Butterflies, Elephants and Gravity to Model Human-Earth Interactions

Maurits Ertsen

The call for this session mentions that “Earth system resilience critically depends on the nonlinear interplay of positive and negative feedbacks of biophysical and increasingly also socio-economic processes. These include dynamics in [many physical events], as well as the dynamics and perturbations associated with human activities.“ In this contribution, I would like to mobilize a few notions to discuss this issue.

A typical approach is to scale up human dimensions to Earth system model scales. Humans become aggregated into social structures, even societies, that change every year or so. I propose to scale down the Earth system to humans, both in terms of space and time. I think this offers exiting possibilities to study climate and earth systems in a different way, but also allows for answering the question how we could act today, tomorrow and next week in order to understand which long-term scenarios over decades are more likely to occur.

This would move us away from the view of the Earth as a single system or pattern to a perspective of Earth as an interconnected world of different non-human and human agencies. I would position this idea against the rather popular metaphor of the butterfly effect, “the sensitive dependence on initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later state”. This may be too simple, as one butterfly will meet many other butterflies along the way. As such, the butterfly effect may be a specific example that claims a certain agency for smaller actors within the Earth System, but that builds its analysis on pattern replication through non-linear relations.

Our (perceived) knowledge of patterns colors our analysis of those patterns. We are all familiar with the metaphor of the men observing different parts of the elephant. The metaphor assumes that we know that what the men are examining is an elephant. However, once we do not know either what they are looking at, we need to start with them seeing different things. In the perspective that we know the elephant, the men are just short-sighted. In the more realistic setting that we cannot be certain about what the men observe, we are the ones that need to come up with a convincing way to analyze what is happening, has happened or may happen.

Much work in Earth system modelling model patterns in society, but do not explain how these patterns are the result of continuously performing agencies. The models are built to mimic the patterns that we observed. I propose to replace the patterns we use to explain the same patterns – whether they are power relations or gravity – with representations of the interacting agencies that together produce the Earth system that we think we observe. Gravity may be a nice explanation of the observed pattern that we do not glide away from the surface, but it remains just that. In our modelling efforts, we may apply the notion that gravity acts.

How to cite: Ertsen, M.: Butterflies, Elephants and Gravity to Model Human-Earth Interactions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9962, 2021.

EGU21-8436 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Cascading tipping behavior of the interacting Greenland Ice Sheet and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation in a model of low complexity 

Ann Kristin Klose, Jonathan F. Donges, Ulrike Feudel, and Ricarda Winkelmann

The Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) have been identified as possible tipping elements of the climate system, transitioning into a qualitatively different state with the crossing of a critical driver threshold. They interact via freshwater fluxes into the North Atlantic originating from a melting GIS on the one hand, and via a relative cooling around Greenland with a slowdown of the AMOC on the other. This positive-negative feedback loop raises the question how these effects will influence the overall stability of the coupled system. Here, we qualitatively explore the dynamics and in particular the emergence of cascading tipping behavior of the interacting GIS and AMOC by using process-based but still conceptual models of the individual tipping elements with a simple coupling under idealized forcing scenarios.

We identify patterns of multiple tipping such as (i) overshoot cascades, developing with a temporary threshold overshoot, and (ii) rate-induced cascades, arising under very rapid changes of tipping element drivers. Their occurrence within distinct corridors of dangerous tipping pathways is affected by the melting patterns of the GIS and thus eventually by the imposed external forcing and its time scales.

The conceptual nature of the proposed model does not allow for quantitative statements or projections on the emergence of tipping cascades in the climate system. Rather, our results stress that it is not only necessary to stay below a certain critical threshold to hinder tipping cascades but also to respect safe rates of environmental change to mitigate domino effects and in turn to maintain the resilience of the Earth system.

How to cite: Klose, A. K., Donges, J. F., Feudel, U., and Winkelmann, R.: Cascading tipping behavior of the interacting Greenland Ice Sheet and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation in a model of low complexity , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8436, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8436, 2021.

EGU21-10444 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

 Can the 1.5 deg C warming target be met in a global transition to 100% renewable energy? 

David Schwartzman and Peter Schwartzman

Can the 1.5 deg C warming target still be met with an aggressive phaseout of fossil fuels coupled with a 100% replacement by renewable energy?  We address this question in our modeling study by computing the continuous generation of global wind/solar energy power along with the cumulative carbon dioxide equivalent emissions in a complete phaseout of fossil fuels over a 20 year period. We assume a baseline of energy status at 2018, as well as the EROI of currently available wind/solar energy technologies.  We compare these computed emissions with the state-of-the-science estimates for the remaining carbon budget of carbon dioxide emissions consistent with the 1.5 deg C warming target. Our conclusion is that it is still possible to meet this warming target if the creation of a global 100% renewable energy transition of sufficient capacity begins very soon, coupled with aggressive negative carbon emissions. The latter technology uses a fraction of total renewable energy delivery for direct air capture for permanent crustal storage over the last ten years of this energy transition that is compatible for simulations with no more than 10 to 15 % reinvestment of renewable energy to make more of itself. More efficient renewable technologies in the near future will make this transition easier.  The maximum amount of fossil fuel consumed in our scenarios for the complete transition is no more than 5% of the proven reserves of coal, natural gas and oil as currently estimated.  

 

 

How to cite: Schwartzman, D. and Schwartzman, P.:  Can the 1.5 deg C warming target be met in a global transition to 100% renewable energy? , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10444, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10444, 2021.

EGU21-12898 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10 | Highlight

Long-term legacy of delayed climate mitigation in global glacier response

Fabien Maussion, Quentin Lejeune, Ben Marzeion, Matthias Mengel, David Rounce, Carl Schleussner, and Lilian Schuster

Mountain glaciers have a delayed response to climate change and are expected to continue to melt long after greenhouse gas emissions have stopped, with consequences both for sea-level rise and water resources. In this contribution, we use the Open Global Glacier Model (OGGM) to compute global glacier volume and runoff changes until the year 2300 under a suite of stylized greenhouse gas emission characterized by (i) the year at which anthropogenic emissions culminate, (ii) their reduction rates after peak emissions and (iii) whether they lead to a long-term global temperature stabilization or decline. We show that even under scenarios that achieve the Paris Agreement goal of holding global-mean temperature below 2 °C, glacier contribution to sea-level rise will continue well beyond 2100. Because of this delayed response, the year of peak emissions (i.e. the timing of mitigation action) has a stronger influence on mit-term global glacier change than other emission scenario characteristics, while long-term change is dependent on all factors. We also discuss the impact of early climate mitigation on regional glacier change and the consequences for glacier runoff, both short-term (where some basins are expected to experience an increase of glacier runoff) and long-term (where all regions are expecting a net-zero or even negative glacier contribution to total runoff), underlining the importance of mountain glaciers for regional water availability at all timescales.

How to cite: Maussion, F., Lejeune, Q., Marzeion, B., Mengel, M., Rounce, D., Schleussner, C., and Schuster, L.: Long-term legacy of delayed climate mitigation in global glacier response, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12898, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12898, 2021.

EGU21-11014 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

A modeler's guide to studying the resilience of social-technical-environmental systems

Lea Tamberg, Jobst Heitzig, and Jonathan Donges

The concept of `resilience' is increasingly being applied in the study of social-technical-environmental systems in Earth system and sustainability science. However, the diversity of resilience concepts and a certain (sometimes intended) openness of proposed definitions can lead to misunderstandings and impede their application to systems modelling. We propose an approach that aims to ease communication as well as to support systematic development of research questions and models in the context of resilience. It can be applied independently of the modelling framework or underlying theory of choice. At the heart of this guideline is a checklist consisting of four questions to be answered: (i) Resilience of what? (ii) Resilience regarding what? (iii) Resilience against what? (iv) Resilience how? We refer to the answers to these resilience questions as the "system", the "sustainant", the "adverse influence", and the "response options". The term `sustainant' is a neologism describing the feature of the system (state, structure, function, pathway etc.) that should be maintained (or restored quickly enough) in order to call the system resilient.
The use of this proposed guideline is demonstrated for two application examples: fisheries, and the Amazon rainforest. The examples illustrate the diversity of possible answers to the checklist's questions as well as their benefits in structuring the modelling process. The guideline supports the modeller in communicating precisely what is actually meant by `resilience' in a specific context. This combination of freedom and precision could help to advance the resilience discourse by building a bridge between those demanding unambiguous definitions and those stressing the benefits of generality and flexibility of the resilience concept. 

How to cite: Tamberg, L., Heitzig, J., and Donges, J.: A modeler's guide to studying the resilience of social-technical-environmental systems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11014, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11014, 2021.

EGU21-13294 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Evolutionary rescue can prevent rate-induced tipping in predator-prey systems

Ulrike Feudel, Anna Vanselow, and Lukas Halekotte

Nowadays, populations are faced with unprecedented rates of global climate change, habitat fragmentation and destruction causing an accelerating conversion of their living conditions. Critical transitions in ecosystems, often called regime shifts, lead to sudden shifts in the dominance of species or even to species’ extinction and decline of biodiversity. Many regime shifts are explained as transitions between alternative stable states caused by (i) certain bifurcations when certain parameters or external forcing cross critical thresholds, (ii) fluctuations or (iii) extreme events. We address a fourth mechanism which does not require alternative states but instead, the system performs a large excursion away from its usual behaviour when environmental  conditions change too fast. During this excursion, the system can embrace dangerously, unexpected states. We demonstrate that predator-prey systems can exhibit a population collapse if the rate of environmental change crosses a certain critical rate. In reference to this critical rate of change which has to be surpassed, this transition is called rate-induced tipping (R-tipping). A further difference to the other three tipping mechanisms is that R-tipping mainly manifests during the transient dynamics – the dynamics before the long-term dynamics are reached.  Whether a system will track its usual state or will tip with the consequence of a possible extinction of a species depends crucially on the time scale relations between the ecological timescale and the time scale of environmental change as well as the initial condition. However, populations have the ability to respond to environmental change due to rapid evolution. Employing an eco-evolutionary model we show how such kind of adaptation can prevent rate-induced tipping in predator-prey systems. The corresponding mechanism, called evolutionary rescue, introduces a third timescale which needs to be taken into account. Only a large genetic variation within a population reflecting rapid evolution would be able to successfully counteract an overcritically fast environmental change.

 

How to cite: Feudel, U., Vanselow, A., and Halekotte, L.: Evolutionary rescue can prevent rate-induced tipping in predator-prey systems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13294, 2021.

EGU21-3673 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10 | Highlight

A prototype Earth system impact metric from cross-scale Earth system interactions 

Steven Lade, Ingo Fetzer, Sarah Cornell, and Beatrice Crona

The planetary boundary framework sets limits on the human pressures that maintain the Earth system in a Holocene-like state that supports human wellbeing. A sub-global assessment of these interactions between these pressures is needed to enable businesses and other actors to assess the systemic environmental impacts of their decisions. Here, we analysed interactions between important boundaries for climate change, surface water runoff, and vegetation cover using the dynamic vegetation model LPJmL. Using a feedback model, we then studied how these interactions amplify environmental impacts. For example, we showed that interactions more than triple the Earth system impact of deforestation in South American tropical forest. Finally, we created a prototype Earth system impact metric by combining these amplification factors with an assessment of the current state of the Earth system. We envision that future versions of our prototype metric will allow businesses and other actors to better assess environmental impacts of their decisions.

How to cite: Lade, S., Fetzer, I., Cornell, S., and Crona, B.: A prototype Earth system impact metric from cross-scale Earth system interactions , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3673, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3673, 2021.

EGU21-8908 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Climate-induced hysteresis of the tropical forest in the fire-enabled Earth system model CM2Mc-LPJmL

Markus Drüke, Werner v. Bloh, Boris Sakschewski, Nico Wunderling, Stefan Petri, Manoel Cardoso, Henrique Barbosa, and Kirsten Thonicke

Tropical rainforests are recognized as one of the terrestrial tipping elements which could have profound impacts on the global climate, once their vegetation has transitioned into savanna or grassland states. While several studies investigated the savannization of, e.g., the Amazon rainforest, few studies considered the influence of fire. Fire is expected to potentially shift the savanna-forest boundary and hence impact the dynamical equilibrium between these two possible vegetation states under changing climate. To investigate the climate-induced hysteresis in pan-tropical forests and the impact of fire under future climate conditions, we coupled the well established and comprehensively validated Dynamic Global Vegetation Model LPJmL5.0-FMS to the coupled climate model CM2Mc, which is based on the atmosphere model AM2 and the ocean model MOM5 (CM2Mc-LPJmL v1.0). In CM2Mc, we replaced the simple land surface model LaD with LPJmL and fully coupled the water and energy cycles. Exchanging LaD by LPJmL, and therefore switching from a static and prescribed vegetation to a dynamic vegetation, allows us to model important biosphere processes, including wildfire, tree mortality, permafrost, hydrological cycling, and the impacts of managed land (crop growth and irrigation).

With CM2Mc-LPJmL we conducted simulation experiments where atmospheric CO2 concentrations increased from a pre-industrial level up to 1280 ppm (impact phase) followed by a recovery phase where CO2 concentrations reach pre-industrial levels again. This experiment is performed with and without allowing for wildfires. We find a hysteresis of the biomass and vegetation cover in tropical forest systems, with a strong regional heterogeneity. After biomass loss along increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and accompanied mean surface temperature increase of about 4°C (impact phase), the system does not recover completely into its original state on its return path, even though atmospheric CO2 concentrations return to their original state. While not detecting large-scale tipping points, our results show a climate-induced hysteresis in tropical forest and lagged responses in forest recovery after the climate has returned to its original state. Wildfires slightly widen the climate-induced hysteresis in tropical forests and lead to a lagged response in forest recovery by ca. 30 years.

How to cite: Drüke, M., v. Bloh, W., Sakschewski, B., Wunderling, N., Petri, S., Cardoso, M., Barbosa, H., and Thonicke, K.: Climate-induced hysteresis of the tropical forest in the fire-enabled Earth system model CM2Mc-LPJmL , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8908, 2021.

EGU21-14639 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Quantifying Planetary Boundaries interaction strengths with expert knowledge elicitation

Anna Chrysafi, Mika Jalava, Vili Virkki, Miina Porkka, Vilma Sandström, Johannes Piipponen, Kelsey LaMere, Steven Lade, and Matti Kummu

The concept of planetary boundaries (PBs) was developed to set biophysical limits to human perturbations and to maintain the Earth System at its current steady-state. Research has focused on further updating and improving the PBs, while utilizing them as the conditional basis for sustainable development. A limitation of the current approaches, and focus of our work, is that the PBs closely related to food production are assessed individually without considering their interactions and feedbacks. These PBs include surface water use, land-system change, biogeochemical flows, and biosphere integrity. Such an omission could potentially overestimate the margin for food production within PBs on a local scale, which could have negative implications for sustainable food supply.  

Here, we aim to quantify these interactions with the ultimate goal of estimating a more realistic safe operating space (SOS) for future food production. We build on earlier literature review-based work that identified and quantified many PBs interactions on global scale but was unable to identify and quantify some of the interactions that are important to food production. Thus, we move a step forward by using expert knowledge elicitation to quantify the PBs interactions important to food production at local scale and to qualitatively map the mediating biophysical mechanisms. Expert knowledge elicitation suits the study well since it can fill knowledge gaps when quantitative data is scarce. In this work, we identified the missing links and expanded our knowledge on existing PBs interactions. Following recent work on updating PBs definitions, we divided the biosphere integrity PB into land, freshwater, and ocean components and the surface water PB into blue and green water components. These divisions accommodate for the differences among the Earth System functions. Where needed, we developed new interim control variables to enable quantifying the interaction strengths.

The expert knowledge elicitation was conducted remotely following the IDEA elicitation protocol and utilizing a custom-made web application. A total of 37 experts, in various fields of Earth sciences, completed the process and we received input for all 42 interactions, ranging from 5 to 19 responses each, with a median response rate of 9. We collected both quantitative and qualitative data on interaction strengths, tipping points, and mediating mechanisms, which are aggregated and used in synergy to better describe complex Earth System processes. In addition, we aim to highlight the most important interactions in an effort to prioritize them based on their role in the Earth System and existing knowledge gaps.

How to cite: Chrysafi, A., Jalava, M., Virkki, V., Porkka, M., Sandström, V., Piipponen, J., LaMere, K., Lade, S., and Kummu, M.: Quantifying Planetary Boundaries interaction strengths with expert knowledge elicitation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14639, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14639, 2021.

EGU21-15347 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Earth system resilience through planetary active inference.

Sergio Rubin, Lancelot Da Costa, and Karl Friston

We formalize the resilience of the Earth system under the free energy principle (Friston 2013; Parr et al, 2019; Rubin et al, 2020). This allows us to understand resilience as the self-maintenance of a non-equilibrium steady-state. This autopoietic steady-state depends on gradient flows that counter entropic dissipation by random fluctuations. These flows can also be interpreted in a statistical sense, which amounts to the claim that resilience depends upon the Earth system possessing a Markov blanket were blanket states (i.e., active and sensory states) separate internal states from external states. Our formalization rests on how the metabolic rates of the biosphere (i.e., internal states) relate vicariously to solar radiation at the Earth’s surface (i.e., external states), through the changes in greenhouse and albedo effects (i.e. active states) and ocean-driven global temperature changes (i.e. sensory states). Describing the interaction between the metabolic rates and solar radiation as climatic states—via a Markov blanket—amounts to describing the dynamics of the internal states as actively inferring external states. This underwrites climatic non-equilibrium steady-state through variational free energy minimization—and thus a form of Earth resilience, through active inference at the planetary scale.

References

Friston, K., 2013. Life as we know it. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 10(86), p.20130475.

Parr, T., Da Costa, L. and Friston, K., 2019. Markov blankets, information geometry and stochastic thermodynamics. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 378(2164), p.20190159.

Rubin, S., Parr, T., Da Costa, L. and Friston, K., 2020. Future climates: Markov blankets and active inference in the biosphere. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 17(172), p.20200503.

How to cite: Rubin, S., Da Costa, L., and Friston, K.: Earth system resilience through planetary active inference., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15347, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15347, 2021.

EGU21-8976 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Contagious Transformations? Inter-City Spreading of Sustainability Innovations.

Niklas H. Kitzmann, Jonathan F. Donges, Xuemei Bai, Steven Lade, Pawel Romanczuk, and Ricarda Winkelmann

In the Anthropocene, socio-economic systems are an integral and highly interconnected part of Earth System. The internal dynamics of these systems will decide whether the Earth can remain in, or return to, a resilient state that resembles the Holocene. Understanding these dynamics thus represents an important aspect of Earth System Science.

To prevent the irreversible crossing of Planetary Boundaries, a rapid, global societal shift towards decarbonization and sustainability is imperative. Incremental political measures have thus far proven to be insufficient to adequately address this necessity. Social Contagion and Tipping Processes related to sustainable behavior and innovations represent some of the few promising mechanisms by which the societal and economic transformation may be achieved in the remaining window of opportunity.

Such contagion processes are not limited to individual human beings; in their high political responsiveness and cultural radiance, cities may also be viewed as promising agents in the sustainability transformation. Responsible for a dis-proportionally large part of greenhouse gas emissions, and simultaneously one of the main drivers of sustainable policy innovation and implementation, cities may play a unique role in the global sustainability transformation. Learning from each other to reduce, prepare for and react to the coming environmental changes, they can be conceptualized as nodes in a globe-spanning network. Investigating such a learning network model may yield insights into the social tipping dynamics that are so urgently needed to control the human impacts on the Earth System.

The study presented here aims to identify whether network-based contagion effects are dominant in sustainability policy adoption by cities. An attempt is made to approximate the inter-city innovation spreading network using the global air traffic network, political and trade relations, and other city-to-city connections. These networks are extracted from empirical data, and their prediction power is compared. We analyze the spreading of several municipal policies and innovations related to sustainability transformations as contagion processes on these inter-city networks. Surrogate data methods and a dose-response-contagion approach are used to identify network-spreading-correlations. We then investigate the nature of the spreading process by attempting to reproduce it using statistical models. Examples for investigated spreading innovations are the implementation of Bus Rapid Transit public transport systems, and membership in a sustainability organization.

How to cite: Kitzmann, N. H., Donges, J. F., Bai, X., Lade, S., Romanczuk, P., and Winkelmann, R.: Contagious Transformations? Inter-City Spreading of Sustainability Innovations., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8976, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8976, 2021.

EGU21-15388 | vPICO presentations | CL3.1.10

Environmental effects of silver iodide emitted by hail suppression systems in Aragón (Spain)

José María Orellana-Macías, Jesús Causapé, Jorge Pey, Blas Valero-Garcés, Jesús Reyes, and Iciar Vázquez

Weather modification by means of cloud seeding techniques is widely implemented across the world. In areas where hail suppression systems are installed, silver iodide (AgI) particles are used.

Silver particles fall back to the surface thank to atmospheric deposition. In this research we follow a holistic approach to analyse silver accumulation in water, soils and sediments of Aragón (North-East Spain), where AgI emissions have been released for the last fifty years. We have also assessed silver bioaccumulation in plants and biota, and we have tested its effects in plant growth.

Our results show that silver concentrations in water and soils of areas covered by hail suppression networks are higher than in further areas, although concentrations are below legal thresholds. We have also observed that silver seems to be absorbed by plants and biota, which would act as a silver outflow and it may help to remove silver from the ecosystems.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded by Spanish State Research Agency and FEDER Funds via AgroSOS project (PID2019-108057RB-I00) and DONAIRE project (CGL2015-68993-R), and thanks to a pre-doctoral grant awarded by the Government of Aragon to J. M. Orellana-Macías (BOA 20/ 07/2017).

How to cite: Orellana-Macías, J. M., Causapé, J., Pey, J., Valero-Garcés, B., Reyes, J., and Vázquez, I.: Environmental effects of silver iodide emitted by hail suppression systems in Aragón (Spain), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15388, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15388, 2021.

CL3.2.18 – Towards a net-zero world: remaining carbon budgets, climate response to different emission pathways, and implications for policy

EGU21-10425 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18 | Highlight

Towards high-quality net-zero targets

Joeri Rogelj, Andy Reisinger, Annette Cowie, and Oliver Geden

With the adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015 the world has decided that warming should be kept well below 2°C while pursuing a limit of 1.5°C above preindustrial levels. The Paris Agreement also sets a net emissions reduction goal: in the second half of the century, the balance of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and removals should become net zero. Since 2018, in response to the publication of the IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C, a flurry of net zero target announcements has ensued. Many countries, cities, regions, companies, or other organisations have come forward with targets to reach net zero, or become carbon or climate neutral. These labels describe a wide variety of targets, and rarely detailed. Lack of transparency renders it impossible to understand their ultimate contribution towards the global goal. Here we present a set of key criteria that high-quality net zero targets should address. These nine criteria cover emissions, removals, timing, fairness and a long-term vision. Unless net zero targets provide clarity on these nine criteria, we may not know until it is too late whether the collective promise of net zero targets is adequate to meet the global goal of the Paris Agreement.

How to cite: Rogelj, J., Reisinger, A., Cowie, A., and Geden, O.: Towards high-quality net-zero targets, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10425, 2021.

EGU21-12998 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

The need for clearer climate target definitions - illustrating ambiguities of net zero CO2-eq targets

Nadine Mengis and Andreas Oschlies

Article 4 of the Paris Agreement calls for a “balance between anthropogenic emissions by sources and removals by sinks of greenhouse gases in the second half of this century”. It is not made explicit if this balance should be achieved for each of the greenhouse gases (GHGs) individually or if some sum of all GHGs is supposed to become net-zero. This confusion translated into several declared climate targets, that range from carbon-neutral, over GHG-neutral to climate-neutral, and sometimes use these terms interchangingly. However, these targets imply different trajectories in terms of single GHG emissions and result in vastly different temperature trajectories.
Here, we show the implications of this confusion concerning declared climate target metrics, using the most commonly used metric of CO2-equivalent emissions. The same trajectory of net-zero-2050 CO2-equivalent emissions, shows vast differences in short term and long-term temperature and carbon cycle responses, depending on the distribution of CO2-equivalent emissions across the different GHGs.
We emphasize that achieving net zero CO2 emissions remains a necessary precondition for long-term temperature stabilization. We also show that methane emissions reduction can have large short term benefits, as it would strongly reduce the short term temperature and thereby increase the natural carbon uptake. Going forward we recommend to aim for more transparency in declared climate goals and suggest aiming to achieve net zero anthropogenic emissions for all GHGs individually.

How to cite: Mengis, N. and Oschlies, A.: The need for clearer climate target definitions - illustrating ambiguities of net zero CO2-eq targets, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12998, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12998, 2021.

EGU21-10816 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Greenhouse gas metrics for net zero targets in science and policy

Alexander Nauels, Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, and Joeri Rogelj

The treatment of non-CO2 greenhouse gases is central for scientific assessments of effective climate change mitigation and climate policy. Radiative forcing of a unit of emitted short-lived gases decays quickly; on the order of a decade for methane, as opposed to centuries for CO2. Metric selection for comparing the climate effect of these emissions with CO2 thereby comes with choices regarding short- vs. long-term priorities to achieve mitigation. The global nature of the well-mixed atmosphere also has implications for the transferability of concepts such as global warming potentials from the global to the national scale.

Here we present the implications of metric choice on global emissions balance and net zero, with a particular emphasis on the consistency with the wider context of the Paris Agreement, both on the global as well as the national level. Stylized scenarios show that interpreting the Paris Agreement emissions goals with metrics different from the IPCC AR5 can lead to inconsistencies with the Agreement’s temperature goal. Furthermore, we illustrate that introducing metrics that depend on historical emissions in a national context raises profound questions of equity and fairness, thereby questioning the applicability of non-constant global warming potentials at any but the global level. We provide suggestions to adequately approach these issues in the context of the Paris Agreement and national policy making.

How to cite: Nauels, A., Schleussner, C.-F., and Rogelj, J.: Greenhouse gas metrics for net zero targets in science and policy, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10816, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10816, 2021.

EGU21-11018 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Implications of current net zero targets for long-term emissions pathways and warming levels

Andreas Geiges, Claire Fyson, Frederic Hans, Louise Jeffery, Silke Mooldijk, Matthew Gidden, Deborah Ramapope, Bill Hare, Claire Stockwell, Sofia Gonzales, and Leonardo Nascimento
In 2020, climate target announcements were dominated by net-zero commitments, including by a number of major emitters. Despite the urgency of more ambitious NDCs in the short term, long-term net-zero targets are important for the transition to global zero emissions. Tracking progress towards and assessing the adequacy of these targets requires an assessment of what they mean for transition pathways and associated emissions trajectories at both national and global levels. 
We present an assessment of net-zero targets of the major emitting countries and their implications for long-term emissions trajectories and warming levels. Based on the work of the Climate Action Tracker, country-specific analyses are aggregated to a global emissions pathway to derive a best estimate for a resulting global warming in 2100. Undertaking this analysis requires assumptions to be made regarding projected emissions and removals from the land-use sector, non-CO2 emissions, and the trajectory of total net emissions after net-zero, which we explain and explore. For example, by computing the cumulative emissions of our aggregated net-zero target emissions pathway, we can compare this pathway with modelled global emissions pathways from the IPCC's SR1.5 Special Report, to draw broad conclusions over what current net-zero commitments might mean for carbon dioxide removal and non-CO2 emissions, and the uncertainties therein.

How to cite: Geiges, A., Fyson, C., Hans, F., Jeffery, L., Mooldijk, S., Gidden, M., Ramapope, D., Hare, B., Stockwell, C., Gonzales, S., and Nascimento, L.: Implications of current net zero targets for long-term emissions pathways and warming levels, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11018, 2021.

EGU21-1425 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Net-zero greenhouse gas targets: pathway and when reached equally important

Ilissa Ocko, Tianyi Sun, and Steven Hamburg

The concept of net zero emissions is now a central element of government and business commitments to addressing climate change, with more net zero policies and pledges being rolled out on an almost daily basis. However, of major concern is the limited awareness of how critical the emissions reduction pathway is in achieving desired climate outcomes. The focus of the climate policy community remains on the target date rather than the path to get there, and net zero "by 2050" is considered by many as the required policy characteristic in achieving temperature targets. Ultimately, the rate and magnitude of future warming relies on the amount, type, and timing of greenhouse gas emissions. Based on different combinations of these factors, it is both possible to succeed or fail in achieving temperature goals even if the global community reaches net zero by 2050. For similar reasons, it is also possible to miss the net zero by 2050 target and still succeed in meeting temperature goals. Therefore, it is important to clarify the role of the decarbonization pathway taken and offer recommendations to ensure that net zero pathways succeed in achieving global climate goals. In this analysis, we show how different net zero paths can lead to a range of temperature outcomes, and how we can strengthen the probability of meeting globally agreed upon climate goals by establishing complementary near-term targets. Key components of ensuring success in achieving temperature targets include incorporating a carbon dioxide budget and acting early to reduce methane emissions. Not only do these actions make achieving our goals more likely, but they also make the path forward more affordable and less dependent on technology not yet available at scale. Overall, improved understanding of the role of the path to net zero would create greater flexibility in effectively fulfilling commitments; open opportunities for trading across groups of greenhouse gases with no loss in climate benefits; and make it easier and cheaper to accomplish corporate and government goals.

How to cite: Ocko, I., Sun, T., and Hamburg, S.: Net-zero greenhouse gas targets: pathway and when reached equally important, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1425, 2021.

EGU21-5274 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Climate Simulations to Carbon Neutral with Improved Minimal Complexity Earth Simulator 

Jiewei Chen, Huijuan Cui, and Yangyang Xu

The Paris Agreement stated a goal to keep global warming to well below 2℃, preferably to  1.5 C above preindustrial levels. To further ensure the implementation of the Paris Agreement, recently, many countries have proposed to achieve carbon neutral between 2050-2070. In this study, we produce a set of carbon neutral scenarios and examined their climate responses using the minimal complexity earth simulator (MiCES). First of all, parameter sensitivity analysis is applied to optimize the parameters for the model using a multi-parameter sensitivity analysis method and output measurement method, which turns out that the 7 parameters related to heat and carbon transferred are most sensitive among all 37 parameters. Uncertainties of the key parameters are further constrained by observed emission and temperature within their uncertainty range, providing reference bounds of parameters with 95% confidence intervals. Then we design ideal emission scenarios with China’s carbon emission peak at 2024,2027,2030 and carbon neutral in 2050,2055,2060,2065,2070 and extrapolated to world’s emission. With improved key parameters’ value, we simulated  climate responses to carbon neutral scenarios. We found that the Paris goal of limiting temperature increase to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels will require either negative carbon emission or all greenhouse gases neutral during this century, and the carbon neutral before 2060 proposed by Chinese government will contribute to limiting global temperature increase with the 2 °C level.

How to cite: Chen, J., Cui, H., and Xu, Y.: Climate Simulations to Carbon Neutral with Improved Minimal Complexity Earth Simulator , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5274, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5274, 2021.

EGU21-12585 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Carbon budgets under multiple climate targets

Alexandra Avrutin and Philip Goodwin

A central goal of climate science and policy is to establish and follow carbon emissions pathways towards a single metric of changes in the Earth system. Currently, this most often means restricting global mean surface warming to 1.5 and 2 °C, in line with the Paris Climate Agreement. However, anthropogenic emissions do not lead solely to increases in global mean temperature, but also cause other changes to the Earth system. This study aims to quantify carbon emission pathways that are consistent with additional climate targets, and explore the impact of applying these additional climate targets on the future carbon budget. Here, we consider ocean acidification, although eventually multiple additional climate targets could be considered. 

Emission of carbon dioxide leads to ocean acidification, since the ocean is a significant carbon sink in the climate system, absorbing an estimated 16 to 30% of yearly anthropogenic carbon emissions (Friedlingstein et al., 2020). Increased ocean acidification threatens ocean biodiversity, specifically coral reef systems and calcifying organisms, with impacts up the food web. The effects of acidification extend towards human systems, in part due to the impact on fisheries: Narita et al. (2012) estimate that the loss of mollusk production alone due to acidification could cost 100 billion USD globally following a business-as-usual trajectory towards 2100.

Despite the far-reaching damage caused by ocean acidification, there has been little successful effort to explicitly address ocean acidification in climate policy apart from the Paris Agreement warming targets of 1.5 and 2°C (Harrould-Kolieb and Herr, 2012). Although these targets mitigate many elements of dangerous climate change, Schleussner et al. (2016) project that carbon emission pathways consistent with 1.5°C cause 90% of coral reef areas between 66°N and 66°S to be at risk of long-term degradation in all but a single model run.  

Calculating a future carbon budget based on a temperature goal alone is subject to significant uncertainty, largely due to uncertainties in response of the climate system to forcing and natural carbon sequestration. Here, results from a large observation-constrained model ensemble are presented for pathways that achieve multiple climate targets. The uncertainty in the resulting future carbon budget, compared to the budget for temperature-only targets, is discussed. A secondary aim is to establish a pair of mean ocean pH targets that are analogous with the Paris Agreement targets for global mean warming. 

References 

Friedlingstein P. et al., 2020, Earth System Science Data, DOI: 10.5194/essd-12-3269-2020

Narita, D. et al., 2012, Climate Change, DOI: 10.1007/s10584-011-0383-3

Harrould-Kolieb E.R. et al., 2012, Climate Policy, DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2012.620788

Schleussner C-F. et al., 2016, Earth System Dynamics, DOI: 10.1080/14693062.2012.620788

How to cite: Avrutin, A. and Goodwin, P.: Carbon budgets under multiple climate targets, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12585, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12585, 2021.

EGU21-15535 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Cold truths: What does a warmer Arctic mean for carbon budgets consistent with the Paris Agreement?

Rachael Treharne, Brendan Rogers, Thomas Gasser, Merritt Turetsky, Erin MacDonald, Carly Phillips, and Sue Natali

Arctic regions are warming more than twice as fast as the global average. This rapid warming is expected to drive a substantial net loss of carbon to the atmosphere, particularly from the thawing of ‘permafrost’, or perennially frozen ground. However, the majority of Earth System Models do not account for permafrost or processes driving the loss of permafrost carbon. In addition, where models do consider permafrost carbon feedbacks, thaw is typically simulated as a gradual, top-down process. This ignores critical, non-linear processes - notably abrupt permafrost thaw, wildfire, and fire-induced permafrost thaw. This means that the potential for a strong positive feedback to future climate change from permafrost regions is not well understood among policy decision-makers. There is therefore an urgent need for a comprehensive and policy-relevant assessment of permafrost carbon feedbacks and their implications for the temperature goals outlined in the Paris Climate Agreement. To address this need, we built upon a reduced complexity Earth System Model and gradual permafrost thaw emulator (Gasser et. al., 2018) by incorporating abrupt thaw, fire emissions, and fire-induced thaw. Using this framework, we assessed the implications of a comprehensive representation of permafrost feedbacks for carbon budgets that constrain warming to 1.5°C and 2°C. We found that combined feedbacks - gradual thaw, abrupt thaw, and fire processes - resulted in a substantial reduction in global carbon budgets to remain below 1.5°C and 2°C.

How to cite: Treharne, R., Rogers, B., Gasser, T., Turetsky, M., MacDonald, E., Phillips, C., and Natali, S.: Cold truths: What does a warmer Arctic mean for carbon budgets consistent with the Paris Agreement?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15535, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15535, 2021.

EGU21-2440 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Controls of the TCRE in Earth system models

Ric Williams, Paulo Ceppi, and Anna Katavouta

The controls of a climate metric, the Transient Climate Response to cumulative carbon Emissions (TCRE), are assessed using a suite of Earth system models, 9 CMIP6 and 7 CMIP5, following an annual 1% rise in atmospheric CO2 over 140 years. The TCRE is interpreted in terms of a product of three dependences: (i) a thermal response involving the surface warming dependence on radiative forcing (including the effects of physical climate feedbacks and planetary heat uptake), (ii) a radiative response involving the radiative forcing dependence on changes in atmospheric carbon and (iii) a carbon response involving the airborne fraction (involving terrestrial and ocean carbon uptake). The near constancy of the TCRE is found to result primarily from a compensation between two factors: (i) the thermal response strengthens  in time from more surface warming per radiative forcing due to a strengthening in surface warming from short-wave cloud feedbacks and a declining effectiveness of ocean heat uptake, while  (ii) the radiative response weakens in time due to a saturation in the radiative forcing with increasing atmospheric carbon. This near constancy of the TCRE at least in complex Earth system models appears to be rather fortuitous given the competing effects of physical climate feedbacks, saturation in radiative forcing, changes in ocean heat uptake and changes in terrestrial and ocean carbon uptake.

Intermodel differences in the TCRE are mainly controlled by the thermal response, which arise through large differences in physical climate feedbacks that are only partly compensated by smaller differences in ocean heat uptake. The other contributions to the TCRE from the radiative and carbon responses are of comparable importance to the contribution from the thermal response on timescales of 50 years and longer for our subset of CMIP5 models, and 100 years and longer for our subset of CMIP6 models.

 

How to cite: Williams, R., Ceppi, P., and Katavouta, A.: Controls of the TCRE in Earth system models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2440, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2440, 2021.

EGU21-15392 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

The Transient Response of the Carbon-Cycle-Climate Continuum to CO2 Emissions is Pathway Dependent 

Alexander J. Winkler, Ranga B. Myneni, Markus Reichstein, and Victor Brovkin

The prevailing understanding of the carbon-cycle response to anthropogenic CO2 emissions suggests that it depends only on the magnitude of this forcing, not on its timing. However, a recent study (Winkler et al., Earth System Dynamics, 2019) demonstrated that the same magnitude of CO2 forcing causes considerably different responses in various Earth system models when realized following different temporal trajectories. Because the modeling community focuses on concentration-driven runs that do not represent a fully-coupled carbon-cycle-climate continuum, and the experimental setups are mainly limited to exponential forcing timelines, the effect of different temporal trajectories of CO2 emissions in the system is under-explored. Together, this could lead to an incomplete notion of the carbon-cycle response to anthropogenic CO2 emissions.

We use the latest CMIP6 version of the Max-Planck-Institute Earth System Model (MPI-ESM1.2) with a fully-coupled carbon cycle to investigate the effect of emission timing in form of four drastically different pathways. All pathways emit an identical total of 1200 Pg C over 200 years, which is about the IPCC estimate to stay below 2 °K of warming, and the approximate amount needed to double the atmospheric CO2 concentration. The four pathways differ only in their CO2 emission rates, which include a constant, a negative parabolic (ramp-up/ramp-down), a linearly decreasing, and an exponentially increasing emission trajectory. These experiments are idealized, but designed not to exceed the observed maximum emission rates, and thus can be placed in the context of the observed system.

We find that the resulting atmospheric CO2 concentration, after all the carbon has been emitted, can vary as much as 100 ppm between the different pathways. The simulations show that for pathways, where the system is exposed to higher rates of CO2 emissions early in the forcing timeline, there is considerably less excess CO2 in the atmosphere at the end. These pathways also show an airborne fraction approaching zero in the final decades of the simulation. At this point, the carbon sinks have reached a strength that removes more carbon from the atmosphere than is emitted. In contrast, the exponentially increasing pathway with high CO2 emission rates in the last decades of the simulation, the pathway usually studied, shows a fairly stable airborne fraction. We propose a new general framework to estimate the atmospheric growth rate of CO2 not only as a function of the emission rate, but also include the aspect of time the system has been exposed to excess CO2 in the atmosphere. As a result, the transient temperature response is a function not only of the cumulative CO2 emissions, but also of the time the system was exposed to the excess CO2. We also apply this framework to other Earth system models and observational records of CO2 concentration and emissions.

The Earth system is currently in a phase of increasing, nearly exponential CO2 forcing. The impact of excess CO2 exposure time could become apparent as we approach the point of maximum CO2 emission rate, affecting the achievability of the climate targets.

How to cite: Winkler, A. J., Myneni, R. B., Reichstein, M., and Brovkin, V.: The Transient Response of the Carbon-Cycle-Climate Continuum to CO2 Emissions is Pathway Dependent , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15392, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15392, 2021.

CO2-induced warming is approximately proportional to the total amount of CO2 emitted. This emergent property of the climate system, known as the Transient Climate Response to cumulative CO2 Emissions (TCRE), gave rise to the concept of a remaining carbon budget that specifies a cap on global CO2 emissions in line with reaching a given temperature target, such as those in the Paris Agreement (e.g., Matthews et al. 2020). However, estimating the policy-relevant TCRE metric directly from the observation-based data products remains challenging due to non-CO2 forcing and land-use change emissions present in the real-world climate conditions.

Here, we present preliminary results for applying and comparing different statistical learning methods to determine TCRE (and later, remaining carbon budgets) from: (i) climate models’ output and (ii) the observational data products. First, we make use of a ‘perfect-model’ setting, i.e. using output from physics-based climate models (CMIP5 and CMIP6) under historical forcing (treated as pseudo-observations). This output is used to train different statistical-learning models, and to make predictions of TCRE (which are known from climate model simulations under CO2-only forcing, per experimental design). Next, we use such trained statistical learning models to make TCRE predictions directly from the observation-based data products.

We also explore interpretability of the applied techniques, to determine where the statistical models are learning from, what the regions of importance are, and the key input features and weights. Explainable AI methods (e.g., McGovern et al. 2019; Molnar 2019; Samek et al. 2019) present a promising way forward in linking data-driven statistical and machine learning methods with traditional physical climate sciences, while leveraging from the large amount of data from the observational data products to provide more robust estimates of, often policy relevant, climate metrics.

References:

Matthews et al. (2020). Opportunities and challenges in using carbon budgets to guide climate policy. Nature Geoscience, 13, 769–779. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-00663-3

McGovern et al. (2019). Making the Black Box More Transparent: Understanding the Physical Implications of Machine Learning, B. Am. Meteorol. Soc., 100, 2175–2199, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0195.1

Molnar, C. (2019) Interpretable Machine Learning -A Guide for Making Black Box Models Explainable. https://christophm.github.io/interpretable-ml-book/

Samek, W. et al. (2019) Explainable AI: Interpreting, explaining and visualizing deep learning. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-28954-6

How to cite: Tokarska, K., Sippel, S., and Knutti, R.: Towards data-driven estimates of the transient climate response to cumulative CO2 emissions using interpretable statistical learning methods, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2451, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2451, 2021.

EGU21-15079 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Overshooting warming targets – temperature reversibility and implications for impacts, adaptation needs and near-term mitigation

Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, Quentin Lejeune, Philippe Ciais, Thomas Gasser, Joeri Rogelj, and Matthias Mengel

Limiting global mean temperature increase to politically agreed temperature limits such as the 1.5°C threshold in the Paris Agreement becomes increasingly challenging. This has given rise to a class of overshoot emissions pathways in the mitigation literature that limit warming to such thresholds only after allowing for a temporary overshoot. However, substantial biogeophysical uncertainties remain regarding the large-scale deployment of Carbon Dioxide Removal technologies required to potentially reverse global warming. Additionally, beyond global mean temperature very little is known about the benefits of declining temperatures on impacts and adaptation needs. Here we will provide an overview of the current state of understanding regarding the reversibility of global warming, as well as impacts and adaptation needs under overshoot pathways.

We highlight the characteristics of the overshoot scenarios from the literature, and especially those that are compatible with identified sustainability limits for Carbon Dioxide Removal deployment. We will compare those characteristics with uncertainties arising from the Earth System’s response which may complicate the efforts to achieve a decrease in Global Mean Temperature after peak warming is reached. This part will include latest results of the permafrost carbon feedback under stylized overshoot scenarios. Eventually, we will summarise the state-of-the-art knowledge and present new results regarding the impacts of overshoot scenarios for non-linear and time-lagged responses such as sea-level rise, permafrost and glaciers. This will allow for a preliminary assessment of the impact and adaptation benefits of early mitigation compatible with a no or low overshoot pathways.

How to cite: Schleussner, C.-F., Lejeune, Q., Ciais, P., Gasser, T., Rogelj, J., and Mengel, M.: Overshooting warming targets – temperature reversibility and implications for impacts, adaptation needs and near-term mitigation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15079, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15079, 2021.

EGU21-12718 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Large ensemble assessment of how the global surface warming response to cumulative carbon differs for negative and positive carbon emissions  

Negar Vakilifard, Katherine Turner, Ric Williams, Philip Holden, Neil Edwards, and David Beerling

The controls of the effective transient climate response (TCRE), defined in terms of the dependence of surface warming since the pre-industrial to the cumulative carbon emission, is explained in terms of climate model experiments for a scenario including positive emissions and then negative emission over a period of 400 years. We employ a pre-calibrated ensemble of GENIE, grid-enabled integrated Earth system model, consisting of 86 members to determine the process of controlling TCRE in both CO2 emissions and drawdown phases. Our results are based on the GENIE simulations with historical forcing from AD 850 including land use change, and the future forcing defined by CO2 emissions and a non-CO2 radiative forcing timeseries. We present the results for the point-source carbon capture and storage (CCS) scenario as a negative emission scenario, following the medium representative concentration pathway (RCP4.5), assuming that the rate of emission drawdown is 2 PgC/yr CO2 for the duration of 100 years. The climate response differs between the periods of positive and negative carbon emissions with a greater ensemble spread during the negative carbon emissions. The controls of the spread in ensemble responses are explained in terms of a combination of thermal processes (involving ocean heat uptake and physical climate feedback), radiative processes (saturation in radiative forcing from CO2 and non-CO2 contributions) and carbon dependences (involving terrestrial and ocean carbon uptake).  

How to cite: Vakilifard, N., Turner, K., Williams, R., Holden, P., Edwards, N., and Beerling, D.: Large ensemble assessment of how the global surface warming response to cumulative carbon differs for negative and positive carbon emissions  , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12718, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12718, 2021.

EGU21-9269 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Emergency responses to the climate crisis: The case of direct air capture of CO2

Ryan Hanna, Ahmed Abdulla, Yangyang Xu, and David Victor

Global emissions of CO2 have been rising at 1–2% per year, and the gap between emissions and what is needed to stop warming at aspirational goals like 1.5ºC is growing. To stabilize warming at 1.5ºC, most studies find that societies must rapidly decarbonize their economy while also removing CO2 previously emitted to the atmosphere. In response to these realities, dozens of national governments, thousands of local administrative governments, and scores of scientists have made formal declarations of a climate crisis that demands a crisis response. In times of crisis, such as war or pandemics, many barriers to policy expenditure and implementation are eclipsed by the need to mobilize aggressively around new missions; and policymaking forged in crisis often reinforces incumbents such as industrial producers. Though highly motivated to slow the climate crisis, governments may struggle to impose costly polices on entrenched interest groups and incumbents, resulting in less mitigation and therefore a greater need for negative emissions.

We model wartime-like crash deployment of CO2 direct air capture (DAC) as a policy response to the climate crisis, calculating (1) the crisis-level financial resources which could be made available for DAC; (2) deployment of DAC plants paired with all combinations of scalable energy supplies and the volumes of CO2 each combination could remove from the atmosphere; and (3) the effects of such a program on atmospheric CO2 concentration and global mean surface temperature.

Government expenditure directed to crises has varied, but on average may be about 5% of national GDP. Thus, we calculate that an emergency DAC program with annual investment of 1.2–1.9% of global GDP (anchored on 5% of US GDP; $1–1.6 trillion) removes 2.2–2.3 GtCO2 yr–1 in 2050, 13–20 GtCO2 yr–1 in 2075, and 570–840 GtCO2 cumulatively over 2025–2100. Though comprising several thousand plants, the DAC program cannot substitute for conventional mitigation: compared to a future in which policy efforts to control emissions follow current trends (SSP2-4.5), DAC substantially hastens the onset of net-zero CO2 emissions (to 2085–2095) and peak warming (to 2090–2095); yet warming still reaches 2.4–2.5ºC in 2100. Only with substantial cuts to emissions (SSP1-2.6) does the DAC program hold temperature rise to 2ºC.

Achieving such massive CO2 removals hinges on near-term investment to boost the future capacity for upscaling. With such prodigious funds, the constraints on DAC deployment in the 2–3 decades following the start of the program are not money but scalability. Early deployments are important because they help drive the technology down its learning curve (indeed, in the long run, initial costs matter less than performance ceilings); they are also important because they increase the potential for future rapid upscaling. Deployment of DAC need not wait for fully decarbonized power grids: we find DAC to be most cost-effective when paired with electricity sources already available today: hydropower and natural gas with renewables; fully renewable systems are more expensive because their low load factors do not allow efficient amortization of capital-intensive DAC plants.

How to cite: Hanna, R., Abdulla, A., Xu, Y., and Victor, D.: Emergency responses to the climate crisis: The case of direct air capture of CO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9269, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9269, 2021.

Achieving a global net-zero emission pathway around mid-century is a critical precondition to limiting global warming to well below 1.5°C. The role of carbon dioxide removal technologies (CDR) such as direct air capture (DAC) and enhanced weathering (EW) have gained centre stage in the discourse of net-zero emission policies. Using an integrated energy-economy-climate modelling tool called GCAM, this study examines the broad sustainability implications of deploying CDR technologies of a global net-zero pathway. Specifically, the applies several Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) indicators as a lens to assesses the synergies and trade-offs associated with upscaling the deployment of DAC and EW technology options.

Based on the best techno-economic performance estimates of DAC and EW technologies, the results show that these technologies can provide about 10.2GtCO2/year of negative emission by 2065. The upscaling of these CDR technologies can substantially reduce the short-to-medium term mitigation cost by about 54.3 %. This policy cost reduction has potential to ameliorate the adverse economic impact of a net-zero pathway by enhancing the SDG targets of No Poverty (i.e. SDG 1) & Decent work and economic growth (i.e. SDG 8). The results also reveal that CDR technologies can reduce the global temperature overshoot by 0.2°C (i.e. SDG 13 (Climate Change)). Further, these CDR solutions can substitute the demand of bioenergy, which in turn leads to major gains in the reduction of cropland (i.e. SDG 15 (Life on Land)).

The enormous transformations in the global energy system to meet the high energy demand for CDR technologies can lead to substantial trade-offs. For instance, the result points to a 27.3% increase in fossil fuel use, nuclear fuel, and carbon sequestration. This trend is counter to the SDG of “responsible consumption and production” (i.e. SDG 12). Also, due to the high capital cost associated with CDR technologies, deploying these technologies at scale has the potential to exacerbate the average cost of energy. Relatively, the increase in energy prices can have adverse effect affordability of energy (i.e. SDG (Affordable and clean energy)). Finally, the result shows other potential security trade-offs in the food and water sectors. Overall, the results provide instructive policy insights about the importance of designing strategies that balance the short and long-term costs and risks of net-zero and CDR technologies.

How to cite: Apeaning, R.: The sustainable development implications of carbon removal technologies in the context of net-zero climate pathway. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14034, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14034, 2021.

EGU21-7608 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

En-ROADS: A Global Energy and Climate Simulator to Support Strategic Thinking and Public Outreach

Florian Kapmeier, John Sterman, Lori Siegel, Sibel Eker, Tom Fiddaman, Jack Homer, Juliette Rooney-Varga, and Andrew Jones

Integrated assessment models (IAMs) have advanced scientific understanding of mitigation pathways, yet most are not directly accessible to policymakers and other leaders. Here we describe En-ROADS, a publicly available, fully documented online policy simulation model designed to complement IAMs in public outreach. En-ROADS represents the energy-economy-climate system at a globally aggregated level. It has been carefully grounded in the best available science and is calibrated to fit historical data and projections from multiple IAMs across all SSP scenarios. Through an intuitive interface, users choose assumptions, policies, and actions to mitigate GHG emissions, receiving immediate feedback on likely energy, emissions, and climate pathways through 2100, enabling users to explore policies and uncertainties for themselves.

 

 

How to cite: Kapmeier, F., Sterman, J., Siegel, L., Eker, S., Fiddaman, T., Homer, J., Rooney-Varga, J., and Jones, A.: En-ROADS: A Global Energy and Climate Simulator to Support Strategic Thinking and Public Outreach, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7608, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7608, 2021.

EGU21-9673 | vPICO presentations | CL3.2.18

Solar Radiation Modification: a multi-century commitment

Susanne Baur, Alexander Nauels, and Carl-Friedrich Schleussner

A growing body of literature investigates the effects of Solar Radiation Modification (SRM) on global and regional climates. Previous studies on SRM have mainly focused on potentials and side effects of deployment without addressing plausible avenues of a subsequent phase-out. This would require large-scale carbon dioxide removal (CDR). Here, we look at SRM deployment lengths to keep global temperature increase to 1.5°C under three emissions scenarios that follow current climate policies until 2100 and are continued with varying assumptions about the magnitude of net-negative CDR (-11.5, -10 and -5 GtCO2yr-1). Our results show that there would be a lock-in of around 245 - 315 years of continuous SRM engagement. During peak deployment in 2125 around 2.80 Wm-2 would have to be compensated by SRM, a number at the upper end of currently estimated maximum SRM potential in climate model environments. In total, around 976 - 1344 GtCO2would need to be removed from the atmosphere via CDR. We find only minor effects of SRM on carbon fluxes a few decades after cessation. Our study shows that even if SRM is combined with high CDR, SRM would come with very long legacies of deployment, implying centuries of costs, cumulative risks and all negative side effects of SRM and CDR combined. 

How to cite: Baur, S., Nauels, A., and Schleussner, C.-F.: Solar Radiation Modification: a multi-century commitment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9673, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9673, 2021.

CL4.1 – Sea level rise: past, present and future

EGU21-10615 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Past, Present and Future Sea Levels in Singapore 

Timothy Shaw, Stephen Chua, Jedrzej Majewski, Li Tanghua, Dhrubajyoti Samanta, Robert Kopp, and Benjamin Horton

Singapore is a small (728 km2) island nation that is vulnerable to rising sea levels with 30% of its land surface area less than 5 m above present sea level. Rising relative sea level (RSL), however, is not uniform with regional RSL changes differing from the global mean due to processes associated with vertical land motion (e.g., glacial-isostatic adjustment) and atmospheric and ocean dynamics. Understanding magnitudes, rates, and driving processes on past and present-day sea level are therefore important to provide greater confidence in accurately quantifying future sea-level rise projections and their uncertainty. Here, we present a synopsis of Singapore’s past and present RSL history using newly developed proxy RSL reconstructions from mangrove peats, coral microatolls and tide gauge data and conclude with probabilistic projections of future RSL change.

Past RSL is characterized by rapid rise during the early Holocene driven primarily by deglaciation of northern hemisphere ice sheets. Sea-level index points (SLIPs) from mangrove peats show sea levels rose rapidly from -20.7 m at 9.5 ka BP to -0.6 m at 7 ka BP at rates of 6-12 mm/yr. This is substantially greater than predicted magnitudes of RSL change from the ICE-6G_C GIA model which shows RSL increasing from -6.4 m at 9.5 ka BP to a ~2.8 m highstand at ~7 ka BP. SLIPs show the mid-Holocene highstand of ~4 ± 3.6 m at 5.2 ka BP before falling towards present at rates up to -2 mm/yr driven by hydro-isostatic processes. The nature of RSL changes during the mid- to late-Holocene transition remains poorly resolved with evidence of sea levels falling below present level to -2.2 ± 2.0 m at 1.2 ka BP. Present RSL reconstructions from coral microatolls coupled with tide-gauge data extend the limited instrumental period in this region beyond ~50 years. They show RSL rose ~0.03 m from 1915 to 1990 at 0.7 ± 1.4 mm/yr before increasing to 1.5 ± 2.1 mm/yr after 1990 to 2019. Future RSL change from probabilistic projections to 2100 under low (RCP 2.6) and high (RCP 8.5) emission scenarios show sea levels rising 0.43 m (50th percentile) (0.06 – 0.96 m; 95% credible interval) and 0.74 m (0.28 – 1.4 m), respectively. However, projected magnitudes of sea-level rise driven by rapid ice sheet dynamics and the unknown contribution of atmospheric and ocean dynamics in Southeast Asia have the potential to exacerbate projection magnitudes.

How to cite: Shaw, T., Chua, S., Majewski, J., Tanghua, L., Samanta, D., Kopp, R., and Horton, B.: Past, Present and Future Sea Levels in Singapore , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10615, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10615, 2021.

EGU21-1951 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Global Mean Sea-level Changes in the Last Two Millennia

Nidheesh Gangadharan, Hugues Goosse, David Parkes, and Heiko Goelzer

Instrumental records show that global mean sea level (GMSL) rose by approximately 15 cm in the 20th Century, with estimates of contributing factors suggesting the major components are ocean thermal expansion and melting of continental ice sheets and glaciers. However, little is known about the individual contributions to GMSL changes over the preindustrial common era (PCE) and the potential differences in the mechanisms controlling those changes between different time periods. Here, we describe the GMSL changes in the PCE by comparing proxy-based reconstructions with estimates derived from model experiments. The ocean thermal expansion is estimated on the basis of Coupled (Paleoclimate) Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP/PMIP) experiments. The contributions of ice sheets and glaciers are based on simulations with an ice-sheet model (IMAU-ICE) and a global glacier model (The Open Global Glacier Model), respectively. We also describe the thermal expansion response in the different ocean basins over the last millennium. The findings provide new insights on the current anthropogenic warming and sea-level rise in a wider context.

How to cite: Gangadharan, N., Goosse, H., Parkes, D., and Goelzer, H.: Global Mean Sea-level Changes in the Last Two Millennia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1951, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1951, 2021.

EGU21-3019 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Variability of the millennial sea-level histories along the western African coasts since the Last Glacial Maximum

Matteo Vacchi, Giorgio Spada, Edward E Anthony, Martina Renzetti, Daniele Melini, and Benjamin P. Horton

The production of standardized relative sea-level (RSL) databases with a full consideration of uncertainty from many coastlines of the globe have enabled the exploration of RSL variability since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 25 to 21 ka BP). Here, we expanded the global databases by evaluating 430 radiocarbon dated sea-level index points (SLIPs), which provided insights into the variability of RSL along the Atlantic African coast (Morocco to South Africa).

Sea-level data were standardized following the International Geoscience Programme (IGCP) protocols to produce a suite of validated SLIPS as well as limiting points. The Atlantic African coast database was grouped in 21 regions according to geographical position and the distance from LGM ice-sheets. We applied a Gaussian model to estimate regional rates of RSL change and compared the regional data with the ICE-6G Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) model predictions.

Our analysis indicates the RSL lowstand at the end of LGM was above -105 ± 4 m as indicated by a suite of marine limiting points. Since the LGM, RSL rose rapidly with average rates of up to 15 mm a-1 between 16 and 9 ka, notably in the Gulf of Guinea. The rates of RSL rise decrease to < 3 mm a-1 after ~7 ka BP. The mid-Holocene illustrates the emergence of a RSL high-stand which exceed the present mean sea-level between ~6.5 and ~4.5 ka BP. This high-stand is spatially variable and, in some regions was observed at elevations up to 2.5 m (e.g., Morocco, West Sahara, Congo, Namibia). In late Holocene RSL dropped gradually to the present datum. However, the coastal sector comprised between Senegal and Angola reveal late Holocene fluctuations, which are not reproduced by current GIA models. The Atlantic African coast database indicates RSL is controlled by the complex interplay by glacio-isostatic subsidence, rotational effects, ocean syphoning, continental levering, and 3-D variations in mantle viscosity structure as well as local forcing (e.g., compaction related subsidence). The Atlantic African coast database offers the possibility to better understand past RSL thereby providing constraints for more robust future sea-level projections of the west African coast in the framework of the on-going climatic change.

How to cite: Vacchi, M., Spada, G., Anthony, E. E., Renzetti, M., Melini, D., and Horton, B. P.: Variability of the millennial sea-level histories along the western African coasts since the Last Glacial Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3019, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3019, 2021.

EGU21-4048 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Relative sea level change during MIS 3: a black hole in the world. New observations from Calabria, central Mediterranean sea

Fabrizio Antonioli, Lucio Calcagnile, Luigi Ferranti, Giuseppe Mastronuzzi, Carmelo Monaco, Paolo Montagna, Paolo Orrù, Gianluca Quarta, Fabrizio Pepe, Giovanni Scardino, Giovanni Scicchitano, Paolo Stocchi, and Marco Taviani

Estimates of global ice volume during MIS 3 (60-29 ka) can be constrained between -25 and -87 m (Shackleton, 2000; Waelbroeck et al., 2002; Clark et al., 2009; Hughes et al., 2013; Grant et al., 2014). As regards the maximum altitude reached during this period there are few observed data for a comparison between the global curves and the variations due to different rheostay of the mantle in coastal areas. Uncertainties on the rheostatic behaviour near- or far-fields from the ice bulk during cold period, make it very difficult to estimate the local sea level during MIS 3. Several factors make investigations of  MIS 3 sea level difficult: i) the areas where suitable coastal sediments formed are currently submerged at depths of few tens of meters below present sea level; ii) the preservation of geomorphic features and sedimentary records is limited due to the erosion occurred during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) with sea level at depth of -130m, followed by marine transgression that determined  the development of ravinement surfaces).

Few data were observed worldwide, especially when tectonics or GIA in the near field leads to uplifts. Our research aims to point out what has been published globally and in the Mediterranean, but, above all, to illustrate the sections of new outcrops in Cannitello (Calabria, Italy) where we have found and dated fossiliferous marine pocket beaches deposited on uplifted bed metamorphic rock. Radiocarbon ages of marine shells (about 43 kyrs cal BP) indicate that these outcrops (presently at 28 and 30 meters above sea level) belong to MIS 3.1. Based on some considerations regarding the altitude of MIS 3.1 highstand, the correction for altitude with the local vertical tectonic movements and GIA of the Cannitello outcrops allows us to revise the eustatic altitude of this highstand. This is consistent with the recent findings (Gowan et al., 2020), which are based on a novel ice sheet modelling technique.

Clark, P.U., Dyke, A.S., Shakun, J.D., Carlson, A.E., Clark, J., Wohlfarth, B., Mitrovica, J.X., Hostetler, S.W., McCabe, A.M., 2009. The Last Glacial Maximum. Science 325, 710–714. doi:10.1126/science.1172873

Gowan, E.J., Zhang, X., Khosravi, S., Rovere, A., Stocchi, P., Hughes, A. C., Gyllencreutz, R., Mangerud, J., Svendsen, J. I., Lohmann, G. (in print): Global ice sheet reconstruction for the past 80000 years. PANGEA, Earth & Environmental Science https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.905800.

Grant, K.M., Rohling, E.J., Ramsey, C.B., Cheng, H., Edwards, R.L., Florindo, F., Heslop, D., Marra, F., Roberts, A.P., Tamisiea, M.E., Williams, F., 2014. Sea-level variability over five glacial cycles. Nature Communications 5, 5076. doi:10.1038/ncomms6076

Hughes, P.D., Gibbard, P.L., Ehlers, J., 2013. Timing of glaciation during the last glacial cycle: evaluating the concept of a global ‘Last Glacial Maximum’ (LGM). Earth-Science Reviews 125, 171–198. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.07.003

Shackleton, N.J., 2000. The 100,000-Year Ice-Age Cycle Identified and Found to Lag Temperature, Carbon Dioxide, and Orbital Eccentricity. Science 289, 1897–1902. doi:10.1126/science.289.5486.1897

Waelbroeck, C., Labeyrie, L., Michel, E., Duplessy, J.C., McManus, J.F., Lambeck, K., Balbon, E., Labracherie, M., 2002. Sea-level and deep water temperature changes derived from benthic foraminifera isotopic records. Quaternary Science Reviews, EPILOG 21, 295–305. doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(01)00101-9

How to cite: Antonioli, F., Calcagnile, L., Ferranti, L., Mastronuzzi, G., Monaco, C., Montagna, P., Orrù, P., Quarta, G., Pepe, F., Scardino, G., Scicchitano, G., Stocchi, P., and Taviani, M.: Relative sea level change during MIS 3: a black hole in the world. New observations from Calabria, central Mediterranean sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4048, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4048, 2021.

EGU21-6516 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Quaternary evolution and paleoclimatology of the coastal cave of Selinitsa (SW Peloponnese, Greece) based on geomorphological and geochemical data

Isidoros Kampolis, Vasilios Skliros, and Stavros Triantafyllidis

The present study examines the Quaternary evolution of the Selinitsa coastal cave in SW Peloponnese, in an attempt to provide new insights on the paleogeographical and paleoclimatological conditions of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. The entrance of Selinitsa Cave is located +18 m above present sea level (a.p.s.l.) on the eastern coast of Messiniakos Gulf (SW Peloponnese), an area of constant uplift since Middle Pleistocene. Considering the phreatic origin of Selinitsa and the presence of sea level indicators at its entrance (biological and geomorphological markers such as tidal notches and Lithophaga borings), all together qualify the cave suitable for the study of former sea level changes and more particularly, those during the last interglacial period. The MIS 5e is considered the most suitable geological period for the estimation of future sea level rise due to the plethora of geological data at-or-near the coastal zone combined to sea-level fluctuation circles from Middle Pleistocene to-date. Previous results from Selinitsa Cave place the sea level of the latest phase of the last interglacial at +18 m a.p.s.l.

The Eastern Mediterranean is the least studied area relative to the Western Mediterranean, regarding sea level changes during Marine Isotope Stage 5e (MIS 5e). In order to reconstruct the paleogeography of the area and shed light on the climatic conditions of this period, our study involved geological mapping, field measurements and identification of geomorphological features (marine terraces, coastal caves and former sedimentary tidal environments). Additionally, 3D mapping of Selinitsa was conducted in order to precisely define its relative location in respect to the present sea level. Moreover, X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy, mineralogy and major and trace element geochemistry of speleothems and clastic sediments found in the inner part of Selinitsa were also employed and combined to the aforementioned geomorphological data.

The objective of the study is to provide a model for the development and the paleoclimatic conditions of the Selinitsa Cave during Late Pleistocene, how sea-level affected the aforementioned system, and finally provide an estimate of sea-level fluctuation over the last 125 ka.

How to cite: Kampolis, I., Skliros, V., and Triantafyllidis, S.: Quaternary evolution and paleoclimatology of the coastal cave of Selinitsa (SW Peloponnese, Greece) based on geomorphological and geochemical data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6516, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6516, 2021.

EGU21-9076 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Formation and preservation of marine terraces during multiple sea level stands

Luca C Malatesta, Noah J. Finnegan, Kimberly Huppert, and Emily Carreño

Marine terraces are a cornerstone for the study of paleo sea level and crustal deformation. Commonly, individual erosive marine terraces are attributed to unique sea level high-stands. This stems from early reasoning that marine platforms could only be significantly widened under moderate rates of sea level rise as at the beginning of an interglacial and preserved onshore by subsequent sea level fall. However, if marine terraces are only created during brief windows at the start of interglacials, this implies that terraces are unchanged over the vast majority of their evolution, despite an often complex submergence history during which waves are constantly acting on the coastline, regardless of the sea level stand. 

Here, we question the basic assumption that individual marine terraces are uniquely linked to distinct sea level high stands and highlight how a single marine terrace can be created By reoccupation of the same uplifting platform by successive sea level stands. We then identify the biases that such polygenetic terraces can introduce into relative sea level reconstructions and inferences of rock uplift rates from marine terrace chronostratigraphy.

Over time, a terrace’s cumulative exposure to wave erosion depends on the local rock uplift rate. Faster rock uplift rates lead to less frequent (fewer reoccupations) or even single episodes of wave erosion of an uplifting terrace and the generation and preservation of numerous terraces. Whereas slower rock uplift rates lead to repeated erosion of a smaller number of polygenetic terraces. The frequency and duration of terrace exposure to wave erosion at sea level depend strongly on rock uplift rate.

Certain rock uplift rates may therefore promote the generation and preservation of particular terraces (e.g. those eroded during recent interglacials). For example, under a rock uplift rate of ca. 1.2 mm/yr, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5e (ca. 120 ka) would resubmerge a terrace eroded ca. 50 kyr earlier for tens of kyr during MIS 6d–e stages (ca. 190–170 ka) and expose it to further wave erosion at sea level. This reoccupation could accordingly promote the formation of a particularly wide or well planed terrace associated with MIS 5e with a greater chance of being preserved and identified. This effect is potentially illustrated by a global compilation of rock uplift rates derived from MIS 5e terraces. It shows an unusual abundance of marine terraces documenting uplift rates between 0.8 and 1.2 mm/yr, supporting the hypothesis that these uplift rates promote exposure of the same terrace to wave erosion during multiple sea level stands.

Hence, the elevations and widths of terraces eroded during specific sea level stands vary widely from site-to-site and depend on local rock uplift rate. Terraces do not necessarily correspond to an elevation close to that of the latest sea level high-stand but may reflect the elevation of an older, longer-lived, occupation. This leads to potential misidentification of terraces if each terrace in a sequence is assumed to form uniquely at successive interglacial high stands and to reflect their elevations.

How to cite: Malatesta, L. C., Finnegan, N. J., Huppert, K., and Carreño, E.: Formation and preservation of marine terraces during multiple sea level stands, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9076, 2021.

EGU21-9885 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Investigating the impact of the Pleistocene sea-level lowstand on offshore fresh groundwater on the New Jersey shelf 

Ariel Thomas, Sönke Reiche, and Christoph Clauser

EGU21-2376 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Sea-Level Reconstructions and Archaeological Indicators: A Case Study from the Submerged Hellenistic Harbor at Akko, Israel

Alyssa Victoria Pietraszek, Oded Katz, Jacob Sharvit, and Beverly Goodman-Tchernov

With the impending threat of continued sea-level rise and coastal inundation, it is important to understand the short- and long-term factors affecting sea-level in a particular region. Such a feat can be accomplished by turning to indicators of past sea-levels. This study aims to highlight the utility of archaeological indicators in sea-level reconstructions, using Akko on Israel’s northern Mediterranean micro-tidal coast as a case study. Here, installations belonging to the maritime metropolis’ Hellenistic Period (3rd to 1st centuries BCE) harbor, which have well-constrained chronological and elevational limitations, were identified at depths averaging 1.1 to 1.2 meters below present sea-level (mbpsl). These features would have been located sub-aerially during the time of their construction and use, indicating a change in relative sea-level in the area since this time. Utilizing a multiple proxy approach incorporating marine sedimentological and geoarchaeological methodologies with previously recorded regional data, three possible explanations for this apparent sea-level change were assessed: structural deterioration, sea-level rise, and vertical tectonic movements. This study revealed that, although signs of structural deterioration are apparent in some parts of the quay, this particular harbor installation is well-established as in situ as it has a continuous upper surface and its southern edge is built directly on the underlying bedrock. Consequently, the harbor’s current submarine position can instead be attributed to sea-level change and/or vertical tectonic displacements. While this amount of sea-level rise (over 1 m) is in agreement with glacio-hydro-eustatic values suggested for other areas of the Mediterranean, it falls below those previously reported locally. In addition, most studies suggest that the tectonic movement along this stretch of coastline is negligible. These new data provide a reliable relative sea-level marker with very little error with regard to maximum sea-level, thereby renewing the overall consideration of the tectonic and sea-level processes that have been active along this stretch of coastline during the last 2,500 years.

How to cite: Pietraszek, A. V., Katz, O., Sharvit, J., and Goodman-Tchernov, B.: Sea-Level Reconstructions and Archaeological Indicators: A Case Study from the Submerged Hellenistic Harbor at Akko, Israel, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2376, 2021.

EGU21-16334 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Reassessing global ice volume: uncertainty and structure in sea level records

Fiona D. Hibbert, Felicity Williams, and Eelco Rohling

Geologically recorded sea-level variations represent the sum total of all contributing processes, be it known or unknown, and may thus help in finding the full range of future sea-level rise. Significant sea-level-rise contributions from both northern and southern ice sheets are not unprecedented in the geological record and offer a well-constrained range of natural scenarios from intervals during which ice volumes were similar to or smaller than present (i.e., interglacial periods), to intervals during which total ice volume was greater (i.e., glacial periods).

The last deglaciation is the most recent period of widespread destabilisation and collapse of major continental ice sheets. Records spanning the last deglaciation (as well as the ice volume maxima) are few, fragmentary and seemingly inconsistent (e.g., the timing and magnitude of melt-water pulses), in part due to locational (tectonic and glacio-isostatic) as well as modern analogue considerations (e.g., palaeo-water depth or facies formation depth). We present a new synthesis of sea-level indicators, with particular emphasis on the geological and biological context, as well as the uncertainties of each record. Using this new compilation and the novel application of statistical methods (trans-dimensional change-point analysis, which avoids “overfitting” of noise in the data), we will assess global ice-volume changes, sea-level fluctuations and changes in climate during the last deglaciation. Finally, we discuss the implications of these uncertainties on our ability to constrain past cryosphere changes.

How to cite: Hibbert, F. D., Williams, F., and Rohling, E.: Reassessing global ice volume: uncertainty and structure in sea level records, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16334, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16334, 2021.

EGU21-13812 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

A new Holocene record from a far-field site in the Indian Ocean to constrain Holocene sea level.

Geoff Richards, Jedrzej Majewski, Christabel Tan, Fangyi Tan, Tanghua Li, Timothy Shaw, and Benjamin Horton

Reconstructions of relative sea level (RSL) during the Holocene provide important constraints for Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) models, determining Earth rheology, estimating ice-equivalent meltwater input, and fingerprinting sources of ice mass loss. In far-field regions such as the Indian Ocean, RSL is characterized by rapid rise during the early Holocene driven primarily by deglaciation of northern hemisphere ice sheets. This cumulated to a characteristic mid-Holocene highstand before falling towards present driven by hydro-isostatic processes. Reconstructions of RSL utilize proxy sea-level indicators to produce sea-level index points (SLIPs) that position RSL in time and space with an associated temporal and vertical uncertainty.

Here we present a standardized RSL database with a full consideration of uncertainty from the Maldives to investigate regional variations in the characteristics of the mid Holocene highstand, and to constrain the eustatic contribution to RSL change during the mid and late Holocene.

We produce new SLIPs from a mangrove forest in Kelaa, part of the Haa Alif Atoll in the northern area of the Maldives. We subsampled for mangrove macro fossils suitable for radiocarbon dating and obtained 5 dates with calibrated ages ranging between 630 – 1340 years BP. These new SLIPs show RSL was between 0.07m – -0.14m during this period.

How to cite: Richards, G., Majewski, J., Tan, C., Tan, F., Li, T., Shaw, T., and Horton, B.: A new Holocene record from a far-field site in the Indian Ocean to constrain Holocene sea level., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13812, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13812, 2021.

EGU21-14572 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Spatial variability of Holocene relative sea level on the China coast

Nicole Khan, Howard Kwok Yin Yu, Circle Yuanyuan Hong, Erica Ashe, Tanghua Li, Fengling Yu, Huixian Chen, Benjamin Horton, William Richard Peltier, and Yongqiang Zong

The coast of China is located in the far-field of past large ice sheets, and therefore relative sea-level (RSL) data from this region have been used to infer sea-level equivalent changes during the Holocene using geophysical models of the glacial-isostatic adjustment (GIA) process. However, there are known misfits between GIA models and Holocene RSL data along the coast of China. For example, GIA model predictions compared to RSL data from China and the Malay-Thailand peninsula show misfits in the amplitude and timing of maximum RSL (highstand) and temporal variations of RSL from the highstand to the present. Furthermore, two different preferred viscosity profiles were recognized between China and the Malay-Thai Peninsula, suggesting the presence of lateral (3D) variations in mantle viscosity across this region. These previous findings lead to several questions: 1) Are the interpretations of RSL proxies and ages robust? 2) Do 3D GIA models improve the fit compared to 1D models? and 3) Are other local- to regional-scale processes significantly influencing RSL on the China coast?

We aim to answer these questions by completing an updated, quality-controlled database of Holocene RSL data and integrating it into a spatio-temporal empirical hierarchical model (STEHM) and comparing the results to GIA models. Here, we use standardized protocols to present a preliminary compilation of Holocene RSL data (105 index points and 134 limiting points) from the southern China coast, which extends geographically from 119.19°N (Fuzhou city of Fujian Province) to 111.82°N (Xisha Islands) and 21.82 °E (Qinzhou city of Guanxi Province) to 25.22 °E (Putian city of Fujian Province). Sedimentary (salt marsh, mangrove, tidal flat, lagoon), geomorphic (Chenier ridge, beach rock), fixed biological (oyster), and coral indicators comprise the majority of RSL data in the compilation for the last 12 ka. The database is divided into sub-regions to investigate the influence of tectonics and GIA on RSL.

We apply the STEHM to the preliminary dataset to estimate the magnitudes and rates of RSL, and compare them to the radially symmetric (1D) ICE-6G_C (VM5a) GIA model pairing and an analysis of the sensitivity of the region to 3D viscosity structure. We find that sub-regional variability (i.e., spatial variability over a shorter spatial scale than the long-wavelength GIA signal) is observed throughout the Holocene. This spatial pattern suggests there is strong influence of local- to regional-scale processes causing RSL to vary from GIA model predictions because no data from sub-regions most sensitive to 3D viscosity structure (e.g., Bohai Bay) were included in these model runs. This preliminary analysis lays the groundwork to assess the potential influence of local-scale processes, such as sediment compaction and tidal range change, as well as regional impacts from tectonic vertical motion.

How to cite: Khan, N., Yu, H. K. Y., Hong, C. Y., Ashe, E., Li, T., Yu, F., Chen, H., Horton, B., Peltier, W. R., and Zong, Y.: Spatial variability of Holocene relative sea level on the China coast, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14572, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14572, 2021.

The Last Interglacial (LIG), as well as other warmer periods in the Earth’s geologic history, provides an analogue for predicted warming conditions in the near future. Analysis of sea-level indicators during this period is important in constraining regional drivers of relative sea-level change (RSL) and in modeling future trajectories of sea-level rise. In southeast Asia, several studies have been done to examine LIG sea-level indicators such as coral reef terraces and tidal notches. A synthesis of the state-of-the-art of the LIG RSL indicators in the region, meanwhile, has yet to be done. We reviewed over 50 published works on the LIG RSL indicators in southeast Asia and used the framework of the World Atlas of Last Interglacial Shorelines (WALIS) in building a standardized database of previously published LIG RSL indicators in the region. In total, we identified 38 unique RSL indicators and inserted almost 140 ages in the database. Available data from Indonesia, the Philippines, and East Timor points to variable elevation of sea-level indicators during the LIG highlighting the complex tectonic setting of this region. Variable uplift rates (from as low as 0.02 to as high as 1.1 m/ka) were reported in the study areas echoing various collision and subduction processes influencing these sites. Although several age constraints and elevation measurements have been provided by these studies, more data is still needed to shed more light on the RSL changes in the region. With this effort under the WALIS framework, we hope to identify gaps in the LIG RSL indicators literature in SE Asia and recognize potential areas that can be visited for future work. We also hope that this initiative will help us further understand the different drivers of past sea-level changes in SE Asia and will provide inputs for projections of sea-level change in the future.

How to cite: Maxwell, K., Westphal, H., and Rovere, A.: A standardized database of Last Interglacial sea-level indicators in southeast Asia: Records from coral reef terraces in a tectonically complex region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16151, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16151, 2021.

EGU21-13813 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Quantifying the influence of glacial isostatic adjustment on current and future sea-level change using 3-D Earth models

Glenn Milne, Maryam Yousefi, and Konstantin Latychev

Ongoing deformation of the Earth in response to past ice-ocean mass exchange is a significant contributor to contemporary sea-level changes and will be an important contributor to future changes. Calibrated models of this process, conventionally termed glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA), have been used to determine its influence on current and future sea-level changes. To date, the majority of these models have assumed a spherically-symmetric (1-D) representation of Earth structure. Here we apply a model that can simulate the isostatic response of a 3-D Earth in order to consider the contribution of lateral structure to model estimates of current and future sea-level change. We will present results from a global analysis based on two independent ice history reconstructions and a suite of 3-D Earth models with viscosity structure constrained using different seismic velocity models and recent estimates of lithosphere thickness variations. The accuracy of these GIA model parameter sets is assessed by comparing model output to a recently published data set of vertical land motion specifically intended to provide a robust measure of the GIA signal (Schumacher et al., Geophysical Journal International, 2018). This comparison indicates that the inclusion of lateral Earth viscosity structure results in an improved fit to the GPS-determined vertical land motion rates although significant residuals persist in some regions indicating that further efforts to improve constraints on this structure are necessary. Using the model parameter sets that best match the GPS constraints to predict the contribution of GIA to contemporary sea-level change indicates that lateral viscosity structure impacts the model estimates by order 1 mm/yr in some regions and that the model uncertainty is of a similar amplitude. Simulations of the GIA contribution to future sea-level change are also significantly affected, with differences, relative to a 1-D Earth model, reaching several decimetres on century timescales and several metres on millennial timescales. 

How to cite: Milne, G., Yousefi, M., and Latychev, K.: Quantifying the influence of glacial isostatic adjustment on current and future sea-level change using 3-D Earth models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13813, 2021.

EGU21-11924 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

How much of the decadal, coastal sea level variability can we describe by climate modes?

Samantha Royston, Jonathan Bamber, and Rory Bingham

It is well known that key climatic variability like the El Niño Southern Oscillation and Pacific Decadal Oscillation dominate steric sea-level variability in the Pacific Ocean and that this variability influences global- and regional-mean sea-level time series. Reducing the known internal variability from these time series reduces trend errors and can elucidate other factors including anthropogenic influence and sea-level acceleration, as has been demonstrated for the open ocean. Here we discuss the influence of key climate modes on coastal, decadal sea-level variability. For coastal stakeholders and managers it is important to understand the decadal-scale and local changes in the rate of sea-level rise in the context of internal variability in order to inform management decisions in the short- to medium-term. We use a 53-year run of a high-resolution NEMO ocean model run, forced by the DRAKKAR reanalysis atmospheric data set and with the global-mean sea level at each timestep removed, to investigate modes of decadal sea-level variability at the coast, in different basins and from different sea-level components. At more than 45% of Pacific Ocean coastal locations, greater than 50% of the decadal sea-level change can be explained by a regression of the leading principal component mode with key climate indices; ENSO in the Pacific Ocean. In different ocean basins, 18.5% to 61.0% of coastal locations have more than 33% of decadal sea-level variance explained by our climate index reconstructions. These areas include coastal regions lacking long-duration or good quality tide gauges for long-term observations such as the North-West Africa coastline. Because of the shallow depth of continental shelves, steric sea-level change propagates onto the shelf as a manometric (mass) sea-level signal. We use a set of tide gauge locations to demonstrate the internal, decadal sea-level change observed at many coasts has a substantial contribution from local, manometric signal that is driven by climate variability.

How to cite: Royston, S., Bamber, J., and Bingham, R.: How much of the decadal, coastal sea level variability can we describe by climate modes?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11924, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11924, 2021.

EGU21-1297 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Characterisation of the chaotic variability of the regional sea level and its components over 1993-2015 at interannual time scales

Alice Carret, William Llovel, Thierry Penduff, and Jean-Marc Molines

Satellite altimetry data have revealed a global mean sea level rise of 3.1 mm/yr since 1993 with large regional sea level trend variability. These remote data highlight complex structures especially in strongly eddying regions. A recent study showed that over 38% of the global ocean area, the chaotic variability that spontaneously emerges from the ocean may hinder the attribution to the atmospheric forcing of regional sea level trends from 1993 to 2015. This study aims at complementing this work by first focusing on the atmospherically-forced and chaotic contributions of regional sea level interannual variability and its components (steric and manometric sea level interannual variability). A global ¼° ocean/sea-ice 50-member ensemble simulation is considered to disentangle the imprints of the atmospheric forcing and of the chaotic ocean variability over 1993-2015. The atmospherically-forced and chaotic interannual variabilities of sea level mainly have a steric origin , except in coastal areas. The chaotic part of the interannual variability of sea level and its components is stronger in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans than in the Indian ocean. The chaotic part of the interannual variability of sea level and of its steric component exceeds 20% over 48% of the global ocean area; this fractional area reduces to 26% for the manometric component. As the chaotic part of the regional sea level interannual variability has a substantial imprint, this study then interested in quantifying the periods when it becomes dominant over the atmospherically-forced contribution. This is assessed using spectral analysis on the ensemble simulation in the frequency domain for the sea level and its steric and manometric components over the global ocean as well as in some basins of interest. This enables us to better characterise and quantify the chaotic ocean variability contribution to regional sea level changes and its components.

How to cite: Carret, A., Llovel, W., Penduff, T., and Molines, J.-M.: Characterisation of the chaotic variability of the regional sea level and its components over 1993-2015 at interannual time scales, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1297, 2021.

EGU21-1188 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Imprint of intrinsic ocean variability on ocean heat content and thermosteric sea level over 2005-2015

William Llovel, Nicolas Kolodziejczyk, Thierry Penduff, Jean-Marc Molines, and Sally Close

Ocean warming accounts for more than 90% of the net Earth energy imbalance. As oceans warm, sea level is rising due to the expansion of seawater. Therefore, estimating ocean heat content (OHC) and thermosteric sea level (TSL) appears of great importance to assess the impact of the on-going global warming.  Different research groups have estimated such climate variables for years now and even routinely (Boyer et al., 2016). These climate variables are derived from in situ temperature measurement at different depths with uneven spatial coverage. Two main sources of uncertainties are attributed to the evolving technology of temperature probes and to the uneven spatio-temporal distribution of in situ measurements (Boyer et al., 2016). A large ensemble of forced eddy-permitting ocean simulations revealed the existence of another uncertainty of regional OHC trend estimates (Sérazin et al 2017): a substantial intrinsic variability emerging from oceanic nonlinearities generates random multi decadal trends, which can mask its atmospherically-forced counterpart. This intrinsic variability can also leave a large imprint on regional sea level trends over the altimetry period (Llovel et al., 2018; Penduff et al., 2019). Less attention has been paid for estimating the imprint of such intrinsic ocean variability in OHC and TSL change associated with the uneven spatial coverage of in situ records. In this study, we investigate the imprint of ocean intrinsic variability and of the uneven distribution of in situ records on OHC and TLS change, by taking advantage of this large ensemble simulation. To do so, we extract synthetic in situ temperature profiles from the simulations in space, time and depth. We then interpolate these synthetic profiles using ISAS (Gaillard et al. 2016) to estimate both the imprint of intrinsic ocean variability and the uneven distribution of in situ data to OHC change and TSL change from 2005 to 2015.

How to cite: Llovel, W., Kolodziejczyk, N., Penduff, T., Molines, J.-M., and Close, S.: Imprint of intrinsic ocean variability on ocean heat content and thermosteric sea level over 2005-2015, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1188, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1188, 2021.

EGU21-2051 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Closing the global mean sea level budget from altimetry, GRACE/GRACE Follow-On and Argo data (2005-present)

Anne Barnoud, Anny Cazenave, Julia Pfeffer, Michaël Ablain, Adrien Guérou, and Jianli Chen

Change in the global mean sea level (GMSL) is the sum of changes in the global mean steric sea level and global mean ocean mass. Over the 1993-2016 period, the GMSL budget was found to be closed, as shown by many independent studies. However, non-closure of the sea level budget after 2016 has been recently reported when using altimetry, Argo and GRACE/GRACE Follow-On data (Chen et al., GRL, 2020). This non-closure may result from errors in one or more components of the sea level budget (altimetry-based GMSL, Argo-based steric sea level or GRACE-based ocean mass). In this study, we investigated possible sources of errors affecting atlimetry and Argo data used to assess closure of the GMSL budget. Concerning altimetry data, we compared the wet tropospheric correction (WTC) applied to Jason-3 data (the reference satellite mission used for the GMSL computation since 2016) with that from the SARAL/AltiKa mission, and found no systematic bias between the radiometer measurements from these two missions. Besides, preliminary comparisons of GMSL trends (using the WTC ECMWF model) between different missions do not suggest discrepancies larger than 0.4 mm/yr over 2016-present. While further analyses are still needed, we find unlikely that non-closure of the sea level budget results from errors of the altimetry system. Concerning Argo data, since 2016, salinity data from different processing groups display strong discrepancies, likely due to instrumental problems and data editing issues. Good agreement is found between all available Argo-based thermosteric products. Given that the halosteric component should be negligible in global average, we re-examined the sea level budget since 2016 using only the thermosteric component and found significant improvement in the budget closure, although it is not yet fully closed. This suggests that the observed discrepancies in the Argo-based halosteric component largely contribute to the non-closure of the GMSL budget in the recent years.

How to cite: Barnoud, A., Cazenave, A., Pfeffer, J., Ablain, M., Guérou, A., and Chen, J.: Closing the global mean sea level budget from altimetry, GRACE/GRACE Follow-On and Argo data (2005-present), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2051, 2021.

EGU21-2574 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Regional patterns of ocean mass sea-level change over the satellite altimetry era (1993-2017)

Carolina M. L. Camargo, Riccardo E. M. Riva, and Aimée B. A. Slangen

Ocean mass variation is one of the main drivers of present-day sea-level change (SLC). Also known as barystatic SLC, those fluctuations are due to the melting of continental ice from glaciers and ice sheets, and variations in landwater storage. While a large number of studies have quantified the contribution of barystatic SLC to global mean SLC, fewer works have looked into how much ocean mass has contributed to regional SLC. Besides, most of the regional studies have focused only on the effect of one of the components (e.g., melt from Antarctica), or on the period and results of the GRACE satellite mission (since 2002). This work aims at providing a comprehensive analysis of global and regional barystatic SLC since 1993. For that, we collect a suite of estimates of the individual freshwater sources, namely the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets, glaciers and terrestrial water storage. We then use them as input on the sea-level equation to obtain regional patters (fingerprints) of barystatic SLC, and validate our results by comparing the individual estimates with the values obtained from GRACE products. We finalize our analysis by looking into trend uncertainty patterns related to each contribution.

How to cite: Camargo, C. M. L., Riva, R. E. M., and Slangen, A. B. A.: Regional patterns of ocean mass sea-level change over the satellite altimetry era (1993-2017), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2574, 2021.

EGU21-10174 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1 | Highlight

Global sea-level and ocean-mass budgets using advanced data products and uncertainty characterisation

Martin Horwath and Anny Cazenave and the SLBC_cci Team

Studies of the global sea-level budget (SLB) and ocean-mass budget (OMB) are essential to assess the reliability of our knowledge of sea-level change and its contributors. The SLB is considered closed if the observed sea-level change agrees with the sum of independently assessed steric and mass contributions. The OMB is considered closed if the observed ocean-mass change is compatible with the sum of assessed mass contributions. 

Here we present results from the Sea-Level Budget Closure (SLBC_cci) project conducted in the framework of ESA’s Climate Change Initiative (CCI). We used data products from CCI projects as well as newly-developed products based on CCI products and on additional data sources. Our focus on products developed in the same framework allowed us to exercise a consistent uncertainty characterisation and its propagation to the budget closure analyses, where the SLB and the OMB are assessed simultaneously. 

We present time series of global mean sea-level changes from satellite altimetry; new time series of the global mean steric component generated from Argo drifter data with incorporation of sea surface temperature data; time series of ocean-mass change derived from GRACE satellite gravimetry; time series of global glacier mass change from a global glacier model; time series of mass changes of the Greenland Ice Sheet and the Antarctic Ice Sheet both from satellite radar altimetry and from GRACE; as well as time series of land water storage change from the WaterGAP global hydrological model. Our budget analyses address the periods 1993–2016 (covered by the satellite altimetry records) and 2003–2016 (covered by GRACE and the Argo drifter system). In terms of the mean rates of change (linear trends), the SLB is closed within uncertainties for both periods, and the OMB, assessable for 2003–2016 only, is also closed within uncertainties. Uncertainties (1-sigma) arising from the combined uncertainties of the elements of the different budgets considered are between 0.26 mm/yr and 0.40 mm/yr, that is, on the order of 10% of the magnitude of global mean sea-level rise, which is 3.05 ± 0.24 mm/yr and 3.65 ± 0.26 mm/yr for 1993-2016 and 2003-2016, respectively. We also assessed the budgets on a monthly time series basis. The statistics of monthly misclosure agrees with the combined uncertainties of the budget elements, which amount to typically 2-3 mm for the 2003–2016 period. We discuss possible origins of the residual misclosure.

How to cite: Horwath, M. and Cazenave, A. and the SLBC_cci Team: Global sea-level and ocean-mass budgets using advanced data products and uncertainty characterisation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10174, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10174, 2021.

EGU21-2068 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Local sea level trends, accelerations and uncertainties over 1993-2019

Pierre Prandi, Benoit Meyssignac, Michaël Ablain, Giorgio Spada, Aurélien Ribes, Jean-François Legeais, and Jérôme Benveniste

Satellite altimetry missions provide a quasi-global synoptic view of sea level variations over more than 25 years and provide regional sea level (SL) indicators such as trends and accelerations. Estimating realistic uncertainties on these quantities is crucial to address current climate science questions. While uncertainty estimates are available for the global mean sea level (GMSL), information is not available at local scales so far. We estimate a local satellite altimetry error budget and use it to derive local error variance-covariance matrices, and estimate confidence intervals on trends and accelerations at the 90% confidence level. Over 1993–2019, we find that the average local sea level trend uncertainty is 0.83 mm.yr−1 with values ranging from 0.78 to 1.22 mm.yr−1. For accelerations, uncertainties range from 0.057 to 0.12 mm.yr−2, with a mean value of 0.062. We also perform a sensitivity study to investigate a range of plausible error budgets.

A dataset consisiting of a single NetCDF file containing local error levels, error variance-covariance matrices, SL trends and accelerations, along with corresponding uncertainties is provided (https://doi.org/10.17882/74862). Code to reproduce the study is also distributed (https://github.com/pierre-prandi/rsl). With this information, users should be able to reuse these error levels to derive uncertainties on any metric (e.g. inter annual variability) or time period.

 

How to cite: Prandi, P., Meyssignac, B., Ablain, M., Spada, G., Ribes, A., Legeais, J.-F., and Benveniste, J.: Local sea level trends, accelerations and uncertainties over 1993-2019, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2068, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2068, 2021.

EGU21-2371 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Reassessing sea level change rates in the Mediterranean Sea in the age of altimetry

Francesco De Biasio and Stefano Vignudelli

Consistent long-term satellite-based data-sets of sea surface elevation exist nowadays to study sea level variability, globally and at regional scales. Two of them are suitable for climate-related studies: one produced in the framework of the European Space Agency (ESA)-funded Sea Level Climate Change Initiative (SL_CCI); the other offered by the European Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). Both data-sets cover the global ocean since 1993 to 2015 (SL_CCI) and to present (C3S) at spatial resolution of 0.25 x 0.25 degrees. The first is obtained by merging data from all the available satellite altimetry missions. The second one relies only on a couple of simultaneous altimetry missions at a time to provide stable long-term variability estimates of sea level, is constantly updated and has resolution 0.125 x 0.125 degrees in the Mediterranean Sea.
Previous studies have investigated the relationship between satellite-derived absolute sea level change rates and tide gauge observations of relative sea level change in littoral zones of the Mediterranean basin [Fenoglio-Mark, L., 2002; Fenoglio-Mark et al., 2012]. Other studies made use also of global positioning system measurements of vertical land motion in addition to tide gauge and satellite altimetry data [Rocco F.V., 2015; Zerbini et al., 2017]. Vignudelli et al., [2018] highlighted the difficulty of deriving spatially-consistent information on the sea level rates at regional scale in the Adriatic Sea. Other studies have claimed the possibility to merge locally isolated information into a coherent regional picture using a linear inverse problem approach [Wöppelmann and Marcos, 2012]: such approach has been successfully applied to a number of tide gauges in the Adriatic Sea [De Biasio et al., 2020]. The approach tested in the Adriatic Sea is going to be extended to the Mediterranean and major findings will be presented at conference.
The motivation of this study is that industrial areas are widely spread along the littoral zone of the southern Europe, and residential settlements are densely scattered along the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea. Not least, a strongly rooted seaside tourism is one of the main economic resources of the region, which is particularly exposed to the sea level variability of both natural and anthropogenic origin. A well known example of such a exposition is Venice (northern Italy) which has been recently hit by the second-highest tide in recorded history (November 2019), and is being protected against storm surges by the MOSE barrier since October 2020. Therefore, a re-analyses of the actual sea level rates with novel methodologies that take into account a better usage of all available observations is key to understand the future coastal sea level changes and their relative importance.

Fenoglio-Marc, L. 2002. DOI: 10.1016/S1474-7065(02)00084-0

Fenoglio-Marc, L.; Braitenberg, C.; Tunini, L. 2012. DOI: 10.1016/j.pce.2011.05.014

Rocco, F.V. Ph.D. Thesis, 2015. URI: https://amslaurea.unibo.it/id/eprint/10172

Zerbini, S.; Raicich, F.; Prati, C.M.; Bruni, S.; Conte, S.D.; Errico, M.; Santi, E. 2017. DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.02.009

Vignudelli, S., De Biasio, F., Scozzari, A. Zecchetto, S., and Papa, A. 2019. DOI:10.1007/1345_2018_51

Wöppelmann, G. and Marcos, M. 2012. DOI: 10.1029/2011JC007469

De Biasio, F., Baldin, G. and Vignudelli, S. 2020. DOI:10.3390/jmse8110949

How to cite: De Biasio, F. and Vignudelli, S.: Reassessing sea level change rates in the Mediterranean Sea in the age of altimetry, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2371, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2371, 2021.

EGU21-2836 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Estimating Relative and Absolute Sea Level Rise at Ny-Ålesundwith satellite altimetry and in-situ observations

Stefano Vignudelli and Francesco De Biasio

Consistent and long-term satellite-based data-sets to study climate-scale variations of sea level globally and in the coastal zone are available nowadays. Two altimetry data-sets were recently produced: the first one is generated by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Sea Level Climate Change Initiative (SL_CCI) over a grid of 0.25 x 0.25 degrees, merging and homogenizing the various available satellite altimetry missions. The second one is a climate-oriented altimeter sea level product that started in the framework of the European Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), and is now released as daily-means over a grid of 0.25 x 0.25 degrees, covering the global ocean since 1993 to present. Both reach in the Arctic the latitude of 81.5 N degrees. Therefore, these new altimetry products cover the coastal area surrounding Ny-Ålesund (Svalbard Islands, Norway), where a tide gauge station is active since 1976. Near the Svalbard coasts also the along track surface elevations of the CryoSat-2 mission are made available through the European Space Agency’s Grid Processing on Demand (G-POD) for Earth Observation Applications facility.

In this study, we compare sea level measurements from the Ny-Ålesund tide gauge with the climate-oriented altimeter sea level gridded products (SL_CCI and C3S) and with the along track data from the only CryoSat-2 mission. This study has three objectives: 1) to assess the performances of the gridded data moving from offshore to near coasts; 2) to explore how the synergy with along track high resolution CryoSat-2 data might help to detail the sea ice impact on the observation of relative and absolute sea level rise around Svalbard; 3) to verify if the differences between satellite altimetry and tide gauges can be used as a proxy of vertical ground movement in the study area by adopting the approaches elaborated in Vignudelli et al. [2018] and De Biasio et al. [2020] that can be validated with ground vertical displacements estimated using Global Positioning System (GPS) data from the stations close to Ny-Ålesund.

 

REFERENCES

Vignudelli, S., De Biasio, F., Scozzari, A. Zecchetto, S., and Papa, A. (2019): Sea Level Trends and Variability in the Adriatic Sea and Around Venice, Proceedings of the International Review Workshop on Satellite Altimetry Cal/Val Activities and Applications, 23-26 April 2018, Chania, Crete, Greece. DOI:10.1007/1345_2018_51

De Biasio, F.; Baldin, G.; Vignudelli, S. Revisiting Vertical Land Motion and Sea Level Trends in the Northeastern Adriatic Sea Using Satellite Altimetry and Tide Gauge Data. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2020, 8, 949. DOI:10.3390/jmse8110949

How to cite: Vignudelli, S. and De Biasio, F.: Estimating Relative and Absolute Sea Level Rise at Ny-Ålesundwith satellite altimetry and in-situ observations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2836, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2836, 2021.

EGU21-15087 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

The sources of sea-level rise in the Mediterranean Sea since 1960

Francisco Mir Calafat, Thomas Frederikse, Kevin Horsburgh, and Nadim Dayoub

Sea-level change is geographically non-uniform, with regional departures that can reach several times the global average. Characterizing this spatial variability and understanding its causes is crucial to the design of adaptation strategies for sea-level rise. This, as it turns out, is no easy feat, primarily due to the sparseness of the observational sea-level record in time and space. Long tide gauge records are restricted to a few locations along the coast. Satellite altimetry offers a better spatial coverage but only since 1992. In the Mediterranean Sea, the tide gauge network is heavily biased towards the European shorelines, with only one record with at least 35 years of data on the African coasts. Past studies have attempted to address the difficulties related to this data sparseness in the Mediterranean Sea by combining the available tide gauge records with satellite altimetry observations. The vast majority of such studies represent sea level through a combination of altimetry-derived empirical orthogonal functions whose temporal amplitudes are then inferred from the tide gauge data. Such methods, however, have tremendous difficulty in separating trends and variability, make no distinction between relative and geocentric sea level, and tell us nothing about the causes of sea level changes. Here, we combine observational data from tide gauges and altimetry with sea-level fingerprints of land-mass changes through a Bayesian hierarchical model to quanify the sources of sea-level rise since 1960 at any arbitrary location in the Mediterranean Sea. We find that Mediterranean sea level rose at a relatively low rate from 1960 to 1990, primarily due to dynamic sea-level changes in the nearby Atlantic, at which point it started rising significantly faster with comparable contributions from dynamic sea level and land-mass changes.

How to cite: Mir Calafat, F., Frederikse, T., Horsburgh, K., and Dayoub, N.: The sources of sea-level rise in the Mediterranean Sea since 1960, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15087, 2021.

EGU21-2784 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1 | Highlight

Evidence of acceleration in regional sea-level rise in the North Sea

Riccardo Riva, David Steffelbauer, Jos Timmermans, Jan Kwakkel, and Mark Bakker

Low frequency internal signals bring challenges to signify the role of anthropogenic factors in sea level rise and to attain a certain accuracy in trend and acceleration estimations; thus, modelling these signals is crucial. Due to both spatially and temporally poor coverage of the relevant data sets, identification of internal variability patterns is not straightforward. In this study, the identification and role of low frequency internal variability (decadal and multidecadal) in sea level change of Fremantle tide gauge station is analysed using two climate indices, Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) and Tripole Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (TPO). The wavelet transform is applied on the sea level and climate indices time series for this purpose. It is shown that the multidecadal sea level variability is anticorrelated with corresponding components of climate indices in the Pacific Ocean, with correlation coefficients of -0.9 and -0.76 for TPO and PDO, respectively. The correlations are comparatively low in decadal time scale, by correlation coefficient of approximately -0.5 for both indices. To estimate trend and acceleration in Fremantle, three trajectory models are tested. The first model is a simple second-degree polynomial comprising trend and acceleration terms. Low passed PDO, representing decadal and interdecadal variabilities in Pacific Ocean, is added to the first model to form the second model. For the third model, decomposed signals of decadal and multidecadal variability of TPO are added to the first model. For all trajectory models, different noise models are tried and according to Akaike and Bayesian information criteria, the best noise model is AR(5). In overall, TPO explains the low frequency internal variability better than PDO for sea level variation in Fremantle. Although the estimated trends does not change significantly for the three models, the estimated acceleration is substantially different. The accelerations estimated from the first and second models are statistically insignificant, 0.006 ± 0.012 mm.yr-2 and 0.01 ± 0.01 mm.yr-2 respectively, while this figure for the third model is 0.018 ± 0.01 mm.yr-2. The outcome exemplifies the importance of modelling low frequency internal variability in acceleration estimations for sea level rise in regional scale.

How to cite: Agha Karimi, A.: Multidecadal internal variability role in estimating sea level acceleration: Fremantle case study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12075, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12075, 2021.

EGU21-7826 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Bayesian Hierarchical Modeling of Sea Level Extremes on the Finnish Coast

Olle Räty, Marko Laine, Ulpu Leijala, Jani Särkkä, and Milla Johansson

Coastal cities are going through rapid and challenging changes. Accurate estimates of probabilities of extreme sea levels are a highly valuable asset to face flooding hazards and support safe planning of coastal zones in the future climate. Probabilities of specific extreme events have been traditionally estimated from the observed extremes independently at each tide gauge location. However, this approach has shortcomings. Firstly, sea level observations often cover a relatively short historical time period and thus contain only a small number of extreme cases (e.g. annual maxima). This causes substantial uncertainties when estimating the distribution parameters. Secondly, exact information on sea level extremes between the tide gauge locations and incorporation of dependencies of adjacent stations is often lacking in the analysis.

One way to partially tackle these issues is to exploit spatial dependencies exhibited by the sea level extremes. These dependencies emerge from the fact that sea level variations are often driven by the same physical and dynamical factors at the neighboring stations. Bayesian hierarchical modeling offers a way to model these dependencies. The model structure allows to share information on sea level extremes between the neighboring stations and also provides a natural way to represent modeling uncertainties.

In this study, we use Bayesian hierarchical modeling to estimate return levels of annual sea level maximum on the Finnish coast, located in the northeast parts of the Baltic Sea. As annual maxima are studied, we use the generalized extreme value (GEV) distribution as the basis of our model. To tailor the model specifically for the target region, spatial dependencies are modeled using covariates, which reflect the distinct geometry of the Baltic Sea. We also account for inter-annual and decadal-scale variations in the distribution parameters by including teleconnection indices such as North Atlantic oscillation (NAO) in our model. Preliminary results show that hierarchical modeling provides added value in comparison to the traditional approach, when applied to the available long-term tidegauge time series in Finland. The work presented here is a part of project PREDICT (Predicting extreme weather and sea level for nuclear power plant safety) that supports nuclear power plant safety in Finland.

How to cite: Räty, O., Laine, M., Leijala, U., Särkkä, J., and Johansson, M.: Bayesian Hierarchical Modeling of Sea Level Extremes on the Finnish Coast, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7826, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7826, 2021.

EGU21-15089 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Subpolar Southern Ocean response to changes in the surface momentum, heat and freshwater fluxes under 2xCO2

Fabio Boeira Dias, Catia Domingues, Simon Marsland, Stephen Rintoul, Petteri Uotila, Russ Fiedler, Mauricio Mata, and Abhishek Savita
  • The subpolar Southern Ocean (sSO) around Antarctica has fundamental climate importance. The densest water mass in the global ocean, Antarctica Bottom Water (AABW), originates in the sSO and supplies the lower limb of the Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC), occupying about 36% of the ocean’s volume. However, climate models struggle to represent the processes involved in formation of AABW on the continental shelf, resulting in large differences between models and observations and a wide spread in projections of sea level and other properties. We explore the source of these persistent model biases by examining the response of the sSO to perturbations in surface forcing. Using an ocean-sea ice model (ACCESS-OM2) that forms AABW both on the shelf and in open-ocean (similar to other coarse resolution models), we investigate the sSO response to individual and combined perturbations of surface heat, freshwater and momentum fluxes following the  FAFMIP-protocol. The wind perturbation (i.e. a poleward shift and intensification of the Southern Ocean Westerlies) has the dominant effect, enhancing AABW formation and accelerating the MOC. This occurs through upwelling of warm waters and inhibition of sea-ice growth during winter, which triggers large open-ocean polynya events with associated deep convection. These events occur in the Weddell and Ross Seas and their variability is associated with the heat available at mid-depth; open-ocean polynyas cease when the heat reservoir is depleted. The effects of surface warming and freshening only partially compensate the changes due to wind by increasing the ocean stratification and reducing AABW formation. These results are relevant for the interpretation of climate change projections, suggesting that other coarse  models might respond in similar way and present an opposite trend than those seen from observations.

How to cite: Boeira Dias, F., Domingues, C., Marsland, S., Rintoul, S., Uotila, P., Fiedler, R., Mata, M., and Savita, A.: Subpolar Southern Ocean response to changes in the surface momentum, heat and freshwater fluxes under 2xCO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15089, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15089, 2021.

EGU21-14985 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

A global analysis of subsidence, relative sea-level change and coastal flood exposure

Daniel Lincke, Robert J. Nicholls, Jochen Hinkel, Sally Brown, Athanasios T. Vafeidis, Benoit Meyssignac, Susan E. Hanson, Jan Merkens, and Jiayi Fang

Climate-induced sea-level rise and vertical land movements, including natural and human-induced subsidence in sedimentary coastal lowlands, combine to change relative sea levels around the world's coast. Global-average coastal relative sea-level rise was 2.5 mm/yr over the last two decades. However, as coastal inhabitants are preferentially located in subsiding locations, they experience an average relative sea-level rise up to four times faster at 7.8 to 9.9 mm/yr. This first global quantification of relative sea-level rise shows that the resulting impacts, and adaptation needs are much higher than reported global sea-level rise measurements would suggest. Hence, coastal subsidence is an important global issue that needs more assessment and action. In particular, human-induced subsidence in and surrounding coastal cities can be rapidly reduced with appropriate policy measures for groundwater utilization and drainage. This offers substantial and rapid benefits in terms of reducing growth of coastal flood exposure due to relative sea-level rise.

How to cite: Lincke, D., Nicholls, R. J., Hinkel, J., Brown, S., Vafeidis, A. T., Meyssignac, B., Hanson, S. E., Merkens, J., and Fang, J.: A global analysis of subsidence, relative sea-level change and coastal flood exposure, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14985, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14985, 2021.

EGU21-1965 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1 | Highlight

Projecting Global Mean Sea-Level Change Using CMIP6 Models

Tim Hermans, Jonathan Gregory, Matthew Palmer, Mark Ringer, Caroline Katsman, and Aimée Slangen

The effective climate sensitivity (EffCS) of models in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6 (CMIP6) has increased relative to CMIP5. Consequently, using CMIP6 models tends to lead to larger projections of global mean surface air temperature (GSAT) increase for a given emissions scenario. The effect of increased EffCS on projections of global mean sea-level (GMSL) change however, has so far only been studied using a reduced complexity model. Here, we explore the implications of increased EffCS in CMIP6 models for GMSL change projections in 2100 for three emissions scenarios: SSP5-8.5, SSP2-4.5 and SSP1-2.6.

Whereas CMIP6 projections of GSAT change are substantially higher than in CMIP5, projections of global mean thermal expansion (GTE) are only slightly higher. We use these projections as input to construct projections of GMSL change, using the Monte Carlo approach of IPCC AR5. Isolating the impact of the CMIP6 simulations using consistent methods is an important step to ensure traceability to past IPCC projections of global and regional sea-level change. The resulting 95th percentile of projected GMSL change at 2100 is only 3-7 cm higher for CMIP6 than for CMIP5, depending on the emissions scenario. Projected rates of GMSL rise around 2100 increase more strongly from CMIP5 to CMIP6, though, implying more pronounced differences beyond 2100 and greater committed sea-level rise. GMSL change in 2100 is accurately predicted by time-integrated temperature change and therefore mitigation requires early reduction of emissions.

We also find that the 95th percentile projections based on individual CMIP6 models can differ as much as 51 cm and that the 5-95% range of projected GMSL change for individual CMIP6 models can be substantially outside of the 5-95% range of the CMIP6 multi-model ensemble. Thus, through subsetting the CMIP6 ensemble using EffCS, a choice can be made between characterizing the central part of the probability distribution and more comprehensively sampling the high end of the GMSL projection space, which is relevant to risk-averse stakeholders. Our results show this may substantially alter ensemble projections, underlining the need to constrain EffCS in global climate models in order to reduce uncertainty in sea-level projections.

How to cite: Hermans, T., Gregory, J., Palmer, M., Ringer, M., Katsman, C., and Slangen, A.: Projecting Global Mean Sea-Level Change Using CMIP6 Models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1965, 2021.

EGU21-1934 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Global mean thermosteric sea level projections by 2100 in CMIP6 climate models

Svetlana Jevrejeva, Hindumathi Palanisamy, and Luke Jackson

Most of the excess energy stored in the climate system is taken up by the oceans leading to thermal expansion and sea level rise. Future sea level projections allow decision-makers to assess coastal risk, develop climate resilient communities and plan vital infrastructure in low- elevation coastal zones. Confidence in these projections depends on the ability of climate models to simulate the various components of future sea level rise. In this study we estimate the contribution from thermal expansion to sea level rise using the simulations of global mean thermosteric sea level from 15 available models in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase (CMIP) 6. We calculate a global mean thermosteric sea level rise of 18.8 cm [12.8 - 23.6 cm, 90% range] and 26.8 cm [18.6 - 34.6 cm, 90% range] for the period 2081–2100, relative to 1995-2014 for SSP245 and SSP585 scenarios respectively. In a comparison with a 20 model ensemble from CMIP5, the CMIP6 ensemble mean of future global mean thermosteric sea level rise (2014-2100) is higher for both scenarios and shows a larger variance. By contrast, for the period 1901-1990, global mean thermosteric sea level from CMIP6 has half the variance of that from CMIP5. Over the period 1940-2005, the rate of CMIP6 ensemble mean of global mean thermosteric sea level rise is 0.2 ± 0.1 mm yr-1, which is less than half of the observed rate (0.5 ± 0.02 mm yr-1). At a multi-decadal timescale, there is an offset of ~10 cm per century between observed/modelled thermosteric sea level over the historical period and modelled thermosteric sea level over this century for the same rate of change of global temperature. We further discuss the difference in global mean thermosteric sea level sensitivity to the changes in global surface temperature over the historical and future periods.

 

How to cite: Jevrejeva, S., Palanisamy, H., and Jackson, L.: Global mean thermosteric sea level projections by 2100 in CMIP6 climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1934, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1934, 2021.

EGU21-2779 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1 | Highlight

Quantifying ambiguity in sea-level projections

Goneri Le Cozannet, Jeremy Rohmer, Jean-Charles Manceau, Gael Durand, Catherine Ritz, Angélique Melet, Benoit Meyssignac, David Salas y Mélia, Mark Carson, Aimée Slangen, Jochen Hinkel, Erwin Lambert, Rémi Thiéblemont, Dewi Le Bars, Detlef Stammer, Roderik Van De Wal, and Robert Nicholls

Coastal impacts of climate change and the related mitigation and adaptation needs requires assessments of future sea-level changes. Following a common practice in coastal engineering, probabilistic sea-level projections have been proposed for at least 20 years. This requires a probability model to represent the uncertainties of future sea-level rise, which is not achievable because potential ice sheets mass losses remain poorly understood given the knowledge available today. Here, we apply the principles of extra-probabilistic theories of uncertainties to generate global and regional sea-level projections based on uncertain components. This approach assigns an imprecision to a probabilistic measure, in order to quantify lack of knowledge pertaining to probabilistic projections. This can serve to understand, analyze and communicate uncertainties due to the coexistence of different processes contributing to future sea-level rise, including ice-sheets. We show that the knowledge gained since the 5th Assessment report of the IPCC allows better quantification of how global and regional sea-level rise uncertainties can be reduced with lower greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, Europe and Northern America are among those profiting most from a policy limiting climate change to RCP 2.6 versus RCP 4.5 in terms of reducing uncertainties of sea-level rise.

How to cite: Le Cozannet, G., Rohmer, J., Manceau, J.-C., Durand, G., Ritz, C., Melet, A., Meyssignac, B., Salas y Mélia, D., Carson, M., Slangen, A., Hinkel, J., Lambert, E., Thiéblemont, R., Le Bars, D., Stammer, D., Van De Wal, R., and Nicholls, R.: Quantifying ambiguity in sea-level projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2779, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2779, 2021.

EGU21-8618 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Role of Regional Ocean Dynamics in Dynamic Sea Level Projections by the end of the 21st Century over Southeast Asia

Dhrubajyoti Samanta, Svetlana Jevrejeva, Hindumathi K. Palanisamy, Kristopher B. Karnauskas, Nathalie F. Goodkin, and Benjamin P. Horton

Southeast Asia is especially vulnerable to the impacts of sea-level rise due to the presence of many low-lying small islands and highly populated coastal cities. However, our current understanding of sea-level projections and changes in upper-ocean dynamics over this region currently rely on relatively coarse resolution (~100 km) global climate model (GCM) simulations and is therefore limited over the coastal regions. Here using GCM simulations from the High-Resolution Model Intercomparison Project (HighResMIP) of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) to (1) examine the improvement of mean-state biases in the tropical Pacific and dynamic sea-level (DSL) over Southeast Asia; (2) generate projection on DSL over Southeast Asia under shared socioeconomic pathways phase-5 (SSP5-585); and (3) diagnose the role of changes in regional ocean dynamics under SSP5-585. We select HighResMIP models that included a historical period and shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP) 5-8.5 future scenario for the same ensemble and estimate the projected changes relative to the 1993-2014 period. Drift corrected DSL time series is estimated before examining the projected changes. Due to improved simulation of heat, salt, and mass distribution in the ocean, HighResMIP models not only reduce mean state biases in the tropical Pacific (such as cold-tongue sea surface temperature bias), but also near Southeast Asia including DSL. Despite intermodel diversity, there is an overall agreement of increasing sea-level over Southeast Asia. The multimodel ensemble of HighResMIP models suggests a rise of 0.2 m sea level in dynamic sea level (combined with thermosteric component) over Southeast Asia by 2070. Sea-level rises further up to 0.5 m by the end of the 21st century. Further, we found regional heat and mass transport changes have a major role in the projected sea-level pattern over Southeast Asia. For example, heat convergence to the east of Vietnam can account for most of the sea-level rise in the region. Our study can provide better insight into the contribution of regional ocean dynamics to DSL projections and useful to suggest for further ocean modelling studies.

How to cite: Samanta, D., Jevrejeva, S., Palanisamy, H. K., Karnauskas, K. B., Goodkin, N. F., and Horton, B. P.: Role of Regional Ocean Dynamics in Dynamic Sea Level Projections by the end of the 21st Century over Southeast Asia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8618, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8618, 2021.

EGU21-10937 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

High-resolution regional projections of sea level changes along Western European coasts during the 21st century

Alisée Chaigneau, Guillaume Reffray, Aurore Voldoire, and Angélique Melet

Coastal regions are subject to an increasing anthropogenic pressure. Projections of coastal sea level changes are of great interest for coastal risk assessment and decision-making processes. Sea level projections are typically produced using global climate models. However, their coarse resolution limits the realism of the representation of coastal dynamical processes influencing sea level changes at the coast, potentially leading to substantial biases. Dynamical downscaling methods can be used to refine projections at regional scales by increasing the model spatial resolution and by explicitly including more processes. Such methods rely on the implementation of a high-resolution regional climate model (RCM). 

In this work, we developed the IBI-CCS regional ocean model based on a 1/12° North Eastern Atlantic NEMO ocean model configuration. IBI-CCS includes coastal processes such as tides and atmospheric pressure forcing in addition to the ocean general circulation (dynamic sea level). This RCM is used to perform a dynamical downscaling of CNRM-CM6-1-HR, a global climate model (GCM) developed by the Centre National de Recherches Météorologiques (CNRM) with a 1/4° resolution over the ocean. CNRM-CM6-1-HR contributes to the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6th Phase (CMIP6). IBI-CCS is thus forced by the GCM ocean and atmospheric outputs at the lateral and air-sea boundaries. Several corrections were applied to the GCM forcings to avoid the propagation of climate drifts and biases into the regional simulations. The computations are performed over the 1950 to 2100 period for several CMIP6 climate change scenarios.

In order to validate the dynamical downscaling method, the regionally downscaled (IBI-CCS) and GCM (CNRM-CM6-1-HR) simulations are compared to reanalyses and observational datasets over the 1993-2014 period. These comparisons are performed at different time scales for a selection of ocean variables including sea level. The results show that large scale performances of IBI-CCS are better than those of the GCM thanks to the corrections applied. In addition, high frequency diagnostics are carried out and highlight for example that IBI-CCS sea level extreme events are similar to those of a reference regional ocean reanalysis. In a second phase, the RCM and GCM sea level rise projections are compared over the 21st century. These comparisons allow to investigate the impact of the model resolution and of a more complete representation of coastal processes for the simulation of projected sea level changes. 

How to cite: Chaigneau, A., Reffray, G., Voldoire, A., and Melet, A.: High-resolution regional projections of sea level changes along Western European coasts during the 21st century, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10937, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10937, 2021.

EGU21-11165 | vPICO presentations | CL4.1

Projections of future sea level change from a global perspective and with a focus on South Africa

Lesley Allison, Matthew Palmer, and Ivan Haigh

In this work we explore projections of future sea level change using methods that build upon those used for the IPCC 5th Assessment Report (AR5) and Special Report on Oceans and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC). These methods use a large Monte Carlo simulation to represent the uncertainty across components of sea level change.  The Monte Carlo approach for global mean sea level is extended to local projections for individual tide gauge locations to ensure traceablity to the global mean projections and preserve correlations between terms in the sea level budget.  As part of the WCSSP South Africa programme (which is a collaborative initiative between the Met Office in the UK and the South African Weather Service), we explore the sea level components for locations around the coast of South Africa and examine the physical drivers of local sea level change signals.  For the individual tide gauge locations, the projection uncertainty is larger than it is for the global mean, but several key details emerge and the drivers of these will be discussed.

How to cite: Allison, L., Palmer, M., and Haigh, I.: Projections of future sea level change from a global perspective and with a focus on South Africa, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11165, 2021.

CL4.6 – Arctic climate change: governing mechanisms and global implications

EGU21-9223 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6 | Highlight

Nordic Seas Heat Loss, Atlantic Inflow, and Arctic Sea Ice cover over the last century

Lars H. Smedsrud, Morven Muilwijk, Ailin Brakstad, and Erica Madonna and the Nordic Seas Synthesis Team

Poleward ocean heat transport is a key process in the earth system. Here we detail the changing northward Atlantic Water (AW) flow in the Nordic Seas and the associated Arctic Ocean heat transport and heat loss to the atmosphere since 1900, in relation to the sea ice cover. Our synthesis is largely based on a sea ice-ocean model forced by a reanalysis atmosphere (1900-2018) corroborated by a comprehensive hydrographic database (1950-), measurements of AW inflow (1996-), and other key long-term regional time series. Since the 1970s, ocean temperatures have increased in the Nordic, Barents and Polar Seas, in particular on the shelves. The AW loses heat to the atmosphere as it travels poleward, mostly in  the Nordic Seas, where ~60% of the Arctic Ocean total heat loss resides. Nordic Seas heat loss variability is large, but the long-term positive trend is small. The Barents Sea heat loss is ~30% of the total, but has larger consistently positive trends, related to AW heat transport and sea ice loss. The Arctic seas farther north see only ~10% of the  total heat loss, but show a consistently large increase in heat loss as well as decrease in sea ice since 1900. The AW inflow, the cooling of this water mass as it travels poleward, and the dense outflow have thus all increased since 1900, and they are consistently related through theoretical scaling. Some of the increased AW inflow is wind-driven, and much of the heat loss variability is linked to Cold Air Outbreaks and cyclones in the Nordic and Barents Seas. The oceanic warming is congruent with increased ocean heat transport and a loss of sea ice, and has contributed to the retreat of marine terminating glaciers on Greenland. After 2000, the warming has accelerated, creating a “new normal” that appears to also affect deep water volumes and temperature. The 20th century average Nordic, Barents and Polar Seas CO2 uptake constitutes ~8% of the global ocean, and is almost entirely driven by heat loss to the atmosphere as the AW transforms from inflow to overflow water. The total Arctic Ocean CO2 uptake has increased by ~30% since 1900, which is closely linked to the loss of sea ice in the Barents and Polar Seas.

How to cite: Smedsrud, L. H., Muilwijk, M., Brakstad, A., and Madonna, E. and the Nordic Seas Synthesis Team: Nordic Seas Heat Loss, Atlantic Inflow, and Arctic Sea Ice cover over the last century, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9223, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9223, 2021.

EGU21-8719 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6

Interaction between Atlantic cyclones and Eurasian atmospheric blocking drives warm extremes in the high Arctic

Sonja Murto, Rodrigo Caballero, Gunilla Svensson, and Lukas Papritz

Atmospheric blocking can influence Arctic weather by diverting the mean westerly flow polewards, bringing warm, moist air to high latitudes. Recent studies have shown that diabatic heating processes in the ascending warm conveyor belt branch of extratropical cyclones are relevant to blocking dynamics. This leads to the question of the extent to which diabatic heating associated with mid-latitude cyclones may influence high-latitude blocking and drive Arctic warm events. In this study we investigate the dynamics behind 50 extreme warm events of wintertime high Arctic surface temperature anomalies. We find that 30 of these events are associated with “Ural” blocking, featuring negative upper-level PV anomalies over central Siberia north of the Ural Mountains. Lagrangian back-trajectory calculations show that almost 70% of the air parcels making up these negative PV anomalies experience lifting and diabatic heating (average 14,7 K) in the 9-days prior to blocking. Further, 43,4 % of the heated trajectories undergo maximum heating and lifting in a compact region of the midlatitude North Atlantic, temporally taking place between 6 and 2.5 days before arriving in the blocking region. These trajectories mainly reside in the subtropics before being advected into the lifting region. We also find anomalously high cyclonic activity (on average 3,9 cyclones within a 3,5-day window around the time of maximum lifting) within a sector northwest of the main lifting domain. This study highlights the importance of the interaction between mid-latitude cyclones and Eurasian blocking as driver for Arctic warm extremes.

How to cite: Murto, S., Caballero, R., Svensson, G., and Papritz, L.: Interaction between Atlantic cyclones and Eurasian atmospheric blocking drives warm extremes in the high Arctic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8719, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8719, 2021.

EGU21-8500 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6 | Highlight

Arctic amplification as a rapid response to increased CO2

Tyler Janoski, Michael Previdi, Gabriel Chiodo, Karen Smith, and Lorenzo Polvani

Arctic amplification (AA), or enhanced surface warming of the Arctic, is ubiquitous in observations, and in model simulations subjected to increased greenhouse gas (GHG) forcing. Despite its importance, the mechanisms driving AA are not entirely understood. Here, we show that in CMIP5 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5) general circulation models (GCMs), AA develops within a few months following an instantaneous quadrupling of atmospheric CO2. We find that this rapid AA response can be attributed to the lapse rate feedback, which acts to disproportionately warm the Arctic, even before any significant changes in Arctic sea ice occur. Only on longer timescales (beyond the first few months) does the decrease in sea ice become an important contributor to AA via the albedo feedback and increased ocean-to-atmosphere heat flux. An important limitation of our CMIP5 analysis is that internal climate variability is large on the short time scales considered. To overcome this limitation – and thus better isolate the GHG-forced response – we produced a large ensemble (100 members) of instantaneous CO2-quadrupling simulations using a single GCM, the NCAR Community Earth System Model (CESM1). In our new CESM1 ensemble we find the same rapid AA response seen in the CMIP5 models, confirming that AA ultimately owes its existence to fast atmospheric processes.

How to cite: Janoski, T., Previdi, M., Chiodo, G., Smith, K., and Polvani, L.: Arctic amplification as a rapid response to increased CO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8500, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8500, 2021.

EGU21-15660 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6 | Highlight

Dynamical and thermodynamical contributions to the mid-latitude atmospheric response to Arctic sea ice decline

Svenya Chripko, Rym Msadek, Emilia Sanchez-Gomez, Laurent Terray, Laurent Bessières, and Marie-Pierre Moine

Previous climate model studies have shown that Arctic sea ice decline can solely affect weather and climate at lower latitudes during the cold season. However, the mechanisms beneath this linkage are poorly understood. Whether sea ice loss have had an influence on the lower latitudes climate over the past decades is also uncertain (Barnes and Screen 2015). The goal of this work is to better understand the relative contributions of dyncamical and thermodynamical changes in the atmospheric response to Arctic sea ice loss, which have been suggested to oppose each other (Screen 2017). We conducted two sets of sensitivity transient experiments that allow to isolate the effect of Arctic sea ice decline on the mid-latitudes from other climate forcings, using the climate model CNRM-CM6 (Voldoire et al. 2019) in a coupled configuration or with an atmosphere-only. The first set of experiments, that is part of the European H2020 PRIMAVERA project, consists of a 100-member ensemble in which sea ice albedo is reduced to the ocean value (PERT) in the fully coupled CNRM-CM6, and which is compared to a 1950 control run (CTL) (Haarsma et al. 2016). This yields idealised ice-free conditions in summer and a more moderate sea ice reduction during the following months. The second set of experiments, that is part of the CMIP6 Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project (PAMIP, Smith et al. 2019), consists of a 300-member ensemble in which the atmospheric component of CNRM-CM6 is forced by sea ice anomalies associated with a future 2°C warming (FUT) and present day sea surface temperatures (SSTs). These are compared to experiments in which the atmosphere is forced by present-day sea ice conditions (PD) and the same SSTs. To extract the dynamical component of the response in the two sets of experiments, we use a dynamical adjustment method (Deser et al. 2016) based on a regional reconstruction of circulation analogs. We focus on three mid-latitudes regions in which a significant near-surface temperature response has been identified, namely North America, Europe and central Asia. We show that the cooling occurring over central Asia in both sets of experiments is dynamically-induced through an intensification of the Siberian High, and that opposed temperature responses over North America between the two sets of experiments could be explained by opposed dynamical components occurring in response to the imposed Arctic sea ice decline. Finally, we discuss whether different dynamical and thermodynamical contributions in the PAMIP multi-model experiments could explain the multi-model differences in the atmospheric response to sea ice loss.

How to cite: Chripko, S., Msadek, R., Sanchez-Gomez, E., Terray, L., Bessières, L., and Moine, M.-P.: Dynamical and thermodynamical contributions to the mid-latitude atmospheric response to Arctic sea ice decline, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15660, 2021.

EGU21-5251 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6

The Arctic lapse rate feedback: An energy budget analysis of CMIP6 models

Olivia Linke and Johannes Quaas

The strong warming trend in the Arctic is mostly confined at the surface, and particularly evident during the cold season. The lapse rate feedback (LRF) stands out as one of the dominant causes of the Arctic amplification (besides the surface albedo feedback) given its differing response between high and lower latitudes. The LRF is the deviation from the uniform temperature change throughout the troposphere, and can thereby be quantified as the difference of tropospheric warming and surface warming. In the Arctic, it enforces a positive radiative feedback as the bottom-heavy warming is increasingly muted at higher altitudes, which has been suggested to relate to the lack of vertical mixing. In fact, climate model studies have recently identified more negative lapse rates for models with stronger inversions over large parts of the Arctic ocean, and snow-free land during winter.

Here we quantify individual components of the atmospheric energy balance to better understand the determination of the temperature lapse rate in the Arctic, which does not only interact with the surface albedo feedback, but also changes in atmospheric transport. A decomposition of the atmospheric energy budget is derived from the 6th phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6), and concerns the radiation budgets, the transport divergence of heat and moisture, and the surface turbulent heat fluxes. Alterations of the budget components are obtained through pairs of model scenarios to simulate the impact of increasing atmospheric CO2 levels in an idealized setup.

The most notable features are the strongly opposing winter changes of the surface heat fluxes over regions of sea ice retreat and open Arctic ocean, and the interplay with the compensating energy transport divergence which can be linked to the near-surface air moist static energy in an energetic-diffusive perspective. We further aim to relate the changes of individual energetics to the temperature lapse rate in the Arctic to better understand and quantify the factors contributing to its evolution.

How to cite: Linke, O. and Quaas, J.: The Arctic lapse rate feedback: An energy budget analysis of CMIP6 models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5251, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5251, 2021.

Quantitative estimates of the relationship between the interannual variability of Antarctic and Arctic sea ice and changes in the surface temperature in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres using satellitedata, observational data and reanalysis data for the last four decades (1980-2019) are obtained. The previously noted general increase in the Antarctic sea ice extent (up to 2016) (according to satellite data available only since the late 1970s), happening simultaneously with global warming and rapid decrease in the Arctic sea ice extent, is associated with the regional manifestation of natural climate fluctuations with periods of up to several decades. The results of correlation and crosswavelet analysis indicate significant coherence and negative correlation of hemispheric surface temperature with not only Arctic,but also Antarctic sea ice extent in recent decades.

Seasonal and regional peculiarities of snow cover sensitivity to temperature regime changes in the Northern Hemisphere are noted with an assessment of changes in recent decades. Peculiarities of snow cover variability in Eurasia and North America are presented. In particular, the peculiarities of changes in snow cover during the autumn seasons are noted.

How to cite: Parfenova, M. and Mokhov, I. I.: Features of changes in the sea ice and snow cover extents associated with temperature changes in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres in recent decades., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6564, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6564, 2021.

 Climate change in the Arctic is likely to lead to a significant melting of ice sheets and glaciers. This will be an important driving
  mechanism for future sea-level rise. During the last decades the Greenland ice sheet has lost mass at an unprecedented rate. 
  This has lead to the Greenland ice sheet to be an important contributor to sea-level rise. Here we test the hypothesis that a 
  change in the atmospheric circulation over Greenland contributes to the exceptionally negative surface mass balance observed over the
  last decades. 

  The atmospheric transport contributes an amount of energy into the Arctic that is 
  comparable to that provided directly by the sun. From recently developed Fourier and wavelet based methods it has been found that 
  the planetary component of the latent heat transport affects that Arctic surface temperatures stronger than the decomposed dry-static 
  energy transport and the synoptic scale component of the latent heat transport. 

  The south west ablation zone of the Greenland ice-sheet is one of the main contributors to mass loss of the ice-sheet. Comparing 
  the ablation in this area with patterns of the divergence of latent heat transport shows that similar decadal-scale trends are found 
  in the surface mass balance and divergence of latent heat transport data. 
  During the last decades the divergence of latent heat has shifted from 
  synoptic scale to planetary scale, implying an increased convergence of latent heat transport by synoptic scale waves to the south
  west coast of Greenland. 

  Through linear regressions we find that the shift from planetary scale transport convergence to synoptic scale convergence describes
  approximately 25 % of the surface mass balance anomaly, since year 2000, in the south west region of Greenland. The total amount 
  of energy transported into this region has not changed dramatically. Hence this indicates the importance of the systems transporting 
  the energy or conditions under which the transport by the different wave types take place. 
  Transport by synoptic scale waves seems to be an important contributor to the surface mass loss of the Greenland ice
  sheet. A possible explanation for this is that synoptic scale transport into the ablation zone is associated with warmer conditions
  than the planetary component over the same region. Hence providing favorable conditions for ice melting, and possibly a larger 
  fraction of liquid precipitation. However, why this is so is still a subject we study. 
  Further we try to identify how different melt driving mechanisms are 
  associated with both planetary and synoptic scale divergence of energy transport, and which of these lead to the differing effects on
  the surface mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet.

How to cite: Heiskanen, T. I. H.: The effect of a shift in the atmospheric energy transport scales on the Greenland ice sheet surface mass balance, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14215, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14215, 2021.

The impact of Arctic sea ice decline on the weather and climate in mid-latitudes is still much debated, with observation suggesting a strong and models a much weaker link. In this study, we use the atmospheric model OpenIFS, in a set of model experiments following the protocol outlined in the Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project (PAMIP), to investigate whether the simulated atmospheric response to future changes in Arctic sea ice fundamentally depends on model resolution. More specifically, we increase the horizontal resolution of the model from 125km to 39km with 91 vertical levels; in a second step resolution is further increased to 16km with 137 levels in the vertical. We find that neither the mean atmospheric response nor the ensemble convergence toward the mean are strongly impacted by the model resolutions considered here.

How to cite: Streffing, J., Semmler, T., Zampieri, L., and Jung, T.: Response of Northern Hemisphere weather and climate to Arctic sea ice decline: The role of resolution in Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project (PAMIP) simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14735, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14735, 2021.

EGU21-14736 | vPICO presentations | CL4.6

Linkage between Arctic Sea Ice Area and Atmospheric Blocking Probability over Europe using Logistic Regression Models

Andy Richling, Uwe Ulbrich, Henning Rust, Johannes Riebold, and Dörthe Handorf

Over the last decades the Arctic climate change has been observed with a much faster warming of the Arctic compared to the global average (Arctic amplification) and related sea-ice retreat. These changes in sea ice can affect the large-scale atmospheric circulation over the mid-latitudes, in particular atmospheric blocking, and thus the frequency and severity of extreme events. As a step towards a better understanding of changes in weather and climate extremes over Central Europe associated with Arctic climate change, we first analyze the linkage between recent Arctic sea ice loss and blocking variability using logistic regression models. ERA5 reanalysis data are used on a monthly and seasonal time scale, and specific regional sea ice variabilities are explored. First results indicate an increased occurrence-probability in terms of blocking frequency over Greenland in summer as well as over Scandinavia/Ural in winter during low sea ice conditions. 

How to cite: Richling, A., Ulbrich, U., Rust, H., Riebold, J., and Handorf, D.: Linkage between Arctic Sea Ice Area and Atmospheric Blocking Probability over Europe using Logistic Regression Models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14736, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14736, 2021.

CL4.7 – Arctic changes – processes and feedbacks in climate, ocean and cryosphere

EGU21-1962 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Trends in total heat content in a very long climate change simulation

Martin Stendel

The equivalent potential temperature Θe is a useful measure of the total heat content in the atmosphere, as it is conserved during both dry adiabatic and wet adiabatic processes. It is defined as letting an air parcel expand pseudo-adiabatically until all the water vapour has condensed, release and precipitate all its latent heat and compress it dry-adiabatically to the standard pressure of 1000 hPa.

Changes in surface or air temperature can thus be related to changes in humidity. For example, the relative contributions of temperature and humidity changes in tropical cyclones can be addressed, Arctic amplification due to the fact that saturation mixing ratio follows an exponential curve with temperature can be investigated, and by considering Θe in different vertical levels, an assessment of changes in convective stability can be made.

We have conducted a very long climate simulation with a global model interactively coupled to a Greenland ice sheet component. An extended RCP8.5 scenario is applied, where emissions of greenhouse gases continue to increase and then eventually level out around 2250. The model is then run for another 1000 years. With such an extreme forcing, all Arctic sea ice has completely disappeared, and a large part of the Greenland Ice Sheet has melted at the end of the simulation.

We examine changes in the total heat content based on observations and model data for past and present as well as for future climate. Daily data, allowing the identification of individual weather systems will be discussed for time slices with a seasonally and later a totally ice-free Arctic.

How to cite: Stendel, M.: Trends in total heat content in a very long climate change simulation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1962, 2021.

EGU21-7416 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

The Transient and Equilibrium Response of the AMOC to Arctic sea decline in a coupled model.

Amelie Simon, Brady Ferster, Alexey Fedorov, Juliette Mignot, and Eric Guilyardi

Since the mid-20th century, the Arctic has experienced two major impacts of climate change: a warming at a faster rate than the global mean surface temperature and a reduction of both winter and summer sea ice cover. However, the impact of the Arctic sea ice loss on global climate remains under debate, in particular the impact on the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). Specifically, some studies find that in response to Arctic sea ice decline, the AMOC weakens on multi-decadal timescales, reaching a new equilibrium state with a significantly reduced AMOC, while others studies see a weak AMOC reduction followed by a partial or full recovery. To further investigate the impact of sea ice loss on the climate, ensemble simulations are performed with the coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model CM5A2 from the Insitut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL-CM5A2). To induce the change in sea ice, the Arctic sea ice albedo is reduced by about 23%, previously shown to be consistent with the sea ice changes expected to occur by approximately the year 2040. The experimental design compares the response to sea ice loss starting from AMOC minimum and neutral phases, respectively. The objective of our experiment is to further investigate the AMOC-sea ice relationship in the transient and equilibrium responses to decreased sea ice and the robustness within a coupled model. The initial 30-year response results in similar spatial patterns in sea ice volume and 500mb potential height responses (inducing a negative NAO-like pattern) for both types of initial conditions. In both cases, the AMOC reduces by 0.5 to 1.5Sv Sv (about 15% of the model mean AMOC) during the first ~100 years of the experiment. Yet, there are differences in the response depending on the AMOC initial state, for example, in the magnitude and timing of the AMOC reduction. The AMOC eventually recover towards years 151-200. Our results give insight into the importance of decadal variability for anticipating the response of the next decades to climate change, as well as improves the understanding of the long-term transient and equilibrium responses between AMOC and Arctic sea ice.

How to cite: Simon, A., Ferster, B., Fedorov, A., Mignot, J., and Guilyardi, E.: The Transient and Equilibrium Response of the AMOC to Arctic sea decline in a coupled model., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7416, 2021.

EGU21-13327 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

The role of an interactive Greenland Ice Sheet in abrupt 4xCO2 forcing experiments.

Victoria Lee, Robin S. Smith, and Antony J. Payne

We compare the response of a coupled atmosphere-ocean-Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) model forced with an abrupt quadrupling of CO2 from greenhouse gas concentrations in 1970 with the response of the atmosphere-ocean model with a static GrIS . The model, UKESM1.ice.N96.ORCA1, consists of HadGEM GC3.1 coupled to the BISICLES ice sheet model with mean annual surface mass balance (SMB) passed to BISICLES and orography and cumulated iceberg flux passed back to the atmosphere and ocean, respectively, at the end of each year. The differences in the surface temperature and atmospheric fields between the two experiments are confined to Greenland, with no discernible global effects from the evolving orography. The volume of the GrIS decreases by 15 % in 330 years. The surface height decreases the most (over 800m in 330 years) in southwest GrIS due to surface melting enhanced by feedbacks between elevation, air temperature and albedo. The input of freshwater to the ocean from Greenland is enhanced due to increased meltwater runoff, but the flux from melting icebergs decays to zero as calving from glaciers declines. The resulting sea level rise is dominated by SMB, where the equivalent sea level rise is 1179 mm (5.0 mm/yr) for the static GrIS and 1120 mm (4.4 mm/yr) for the interactive ice sheet at 2300.  There is less sea level rise in the interactive GrIS experiment, even though more mass is lost through surface melting, because the amount lost through iceberg calving decreases as the grounding line of marine-terminating glaciers retreat inland whereas calving in the static experiment is constant.    

How to cite: Lee, V., Smith, R. S., and Payne, A. J.: The role of an interactive Greenland Ice Sheet in abrupt 4xCO2 forcing experiments., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13327, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13327, 2021.

EGU21-3720 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Greenhouse-gas contribution to Arctic sea-ice loss

Yeon-Hee Kim and Seung-Ki Min

Arctic sea-ice area (ASIA) has been declining rapidly throughout the year during recent decades, but a formal quantification of greenhouse gas (GHG) contribution remains limited. This study conducts an attribution analysis of the observed ASIA changes from 1979 to 2017 by comparing three satellite observations with the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) multi-model simulations using an optimal fingerprint method. The observed ASIA exhibits overall decreasing trends across all months with stronger trends in warm seasons. CMIP6 anthropogenic plus natural forcing (ALL) simulations and GHG-only forcing simulations successfully capture the observed temporal trend patterns. Results from detection analysis show that ALL signals are detected robustly for all calendar months for three observations. It is found that GHG signals are detectable in the observed ASIA decrease throughout the year, explaining most of the ASIA reduction, with a much weaker contribution by other external forcings. We additionally find that the Arctic Ocean will occur ice-free in September around the 2040s regardless of the emission scenario.

How to cite: Kim, Y.-H. and Min, S.-K.: Greenhouse-gas contribution to Arctic sea-ice loss, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3720, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3720, 2021.

EGU21-7405 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Radiative forcing of aerosols over the Arctic from the August 2017 Canadian and Greenlandic wildfires

Filippo Calì Quaglia, Daniela Meloni, Alcide Giorgio di Sarra, Tatiana Di Iorio, Virginia Ciardini, Giandomenico Pace, Giovanni Muscari, Silvia Becagli, Marco Cacciani, Ivan Ortega, James W. Hannigan, and Brent N. Holben

Extended and intense wildfires occurred in Northern Canada and, unexpectedly, on the Greenlandic West coast during summer 2017. The thick smoke plume emitted into the atmosphere was transported to the high Arctic, producing one of the largest impacts ever observed in the region. Evidence of Canadian and Greenlandic wildfires was recorded at the Thule High Arctic Atmospheric Observatory (THAAO, 76.5°N, 68.8°W, www.thuleatmos-it.it) by a suite of instruments managed by ENEA, INGV, Univ. of Florence, and NCAR. Ground-based observations of the radiation budget have allowed quantification of the surface radiative forcing at THAAO. 

Excess biomass burning chemical tracers such as CO, HCN, H2CO, C2H6, and NH3 were  measured in the air column above Thule starting from August 19 until August 23. The aerosol optical depth (AOD) reached a peak value of about 0.9 on August 21, while an enhancement of wildfire compounds was  detected in PM10. The measured shortwave radiative forcing was -36.7 W/m2 at 78° solar zenith angle (SZA) for AOD=0.626.

MODTRAN6.0 radiative transfer model (Berk et al., 2014) was used to estimate the aerosol radiative effect and the heating rate profiles at 78° SZA. Measured temperature profiles, integrated water vapour, surface albedo, spectral AOD and aerosol extinction profiles from CALIOP onboard CALIPSO were used as model input. The peak  aerosol heating rate (+0.5 K/day) was  reached within the aerosol layer between 8 and 12 km, while the maximum radiative effect (-45.4 W/m2) is found at 3 km, below the largest aerosol layer.

The regional impact of the event that occurred on August 21 was investigated using a combination of atmospheric radiative transfer modelling with measurements of AOD and ground surface albedo from MODIS. The aerosol properties used in the radiative transfer model were constrained by in situ measurements from THAAO. Albedo data over the ocean have been obtained from Jin et al. (2004). Backward trajectories produced through HYSPLIT simulations (Stein et al., 2015) were also employed to trace biomass burning plumes.

The radiative forcing efficiency (RFE) over land and ocean was derived, finding values spanning from -3 W/m2 to -132 W/m2, depending on surface albedo and solar zenith angle. The fire plume covered a vast portion of the Arctic, with large values of the daily shortwave RF (< -50 W/m2) lasting for a few days. This large amount of aerosol is expected to influence cloud properties in the Arctic, producing significant indirect radiative effects.

How to cite: Calì Quaglia, F., Meloni, D., di Sarra, A. G., Di Iorio, T., Ciardini, V., Pace, G., Muscari, G., Becagli, S., Cacciani, M., Ortega, I., Hannigan, J. W., and Holben, B. N.: Radiative forcing of aerosols over the Arctic from the August 2017 Canadian and Greenlandic wildfires, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7405, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7405, 2021.

EGU21-16215 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Climate contributions to Arctic coastal sea level change

Carsten Ankjær Ludwigsen, Stine Kildegaard Rose, and Ole Baltazar Andersen

The Arctic Ocean is at the frontier of the fast changing climate in the northern latitudes. As the first study, we assessthe different mass and steric components of the observed sea level trend from both absolute sea level (ASL) from altimetryand tide gauges, without using gravimetric observations from GRACE. This approach permits a longer time series and avoidsproblems with errors from leakage effects in GRACE-products. ASL is equal to mass-driven sea level added with steric sealevel, while tide gauge based sea level are also corrected with novel estimates of vertical land movement. Calculations of the5mass component from present-day deglaciation, shows that deglaciation rises Arctic sea level with more than 1 mm y−1, whilethe steric contribution is between -5 and 15 mm y−1 with large spatial variability, with the halosteric signal dominating thepattern. A dynamic mass contribution is derived from the Estimating Circulation and Climate of the Oceans (ECCO)-model(version 4 release 4), which varies between -1 and 2 mm y−1. The combined mass and steric product agrees (within uncertainty)with ASL-trends observed from altimetry in 99% of the Arctic, although large uncertainties originate from poor data coverage in the steric data and large variability in the dynamic product. A comparison with ASL trends observed at tide gauges agreeswith mass+steric at 11 of 12 tide gauge sites.

How to cite: Ludwigsen, C. A., Rose, S. K., and Andersen, O. B.: Climate contributions to Arctic coastal sea level change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16215, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16215, 2021.

EGU21-15997 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Evaluating Dissolved Organic Carbon Retrieval in the Lena River Delta using Sentinel 3 OLCI Data

Rene Preusker, Jan El Kassar, and Bennet Juhls

As air temperatures in the Arctic continue to rise, permafrost thaw intensifies, and discharge from the Arctic rivers increases. These drastic changes are likely to accelerate mobilization of organic matter and its export through rivers into the Arctic Ocean. Therefore, thorough monitoring of these processes becomes increasingly important. The Lena River with its large catchment area is one of the major sources of the organic carbon in the Arctic Ocean and, therefore, plays a crucial role in the Arctic carbon cycle. 
To observe current and future changes of carbon transport via the Lena River, a new monitoring program has been initiated in 2018. In situ water samples are collected from the one of the Lena Delta branches every several days. Since generally the in situ sampling in the Arctic is challenging and costly, in this study, we test the potential of remote sensing to complement the field observations. Remote sensing provides synoptic spatial coverages and high temporal resolution at high latitudes. 
We test the retrieval of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from satellite-derived chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). For this, we use measurements of the Ocean & Land Colour Instrument (OLCI) on board the Sentinel-3 satellites in combination with beforehand tested atmospheric correction algorithms and CDOM retrieval algorithms. The quality of the satellite retrieved DOC of the Lena River water is assessed by DOC, measured in the in situ samples. Remotely sensed DOC contributes to an improvement of DOC fluxes monitoring, which can potentially be extended to all big Arctic rivers.

How to cite: Preusker, R., El Kassar, J., and Juhls, B.: Evaluating Dissolved Organic Carbon Retrieval in the Lena River Delta using Sentinel 3 OLCI Data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15997, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15997, 2021.

EGU21-15178 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

24 years of C3S Arctic regional reanalysis

Kristian Pagh Nielsen, Harald Schyberg, Xiaohua Yang, Eivind Støylen, Per Dahlgren, Bjarne Amstrup, Carlos Peralta, Morten Køltzow, and Jelena Bojarova

The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) regional reanalysis for the Arctic consists of two datasets of Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) for the 24 year period from 1997 to 2021. The high resolution (2.5x2.5 km2) datasets cover Greenland, Iceland, Svalbard, the Barents Sea and Northern Scandinavia. Several islands in the Russian Arctic and a few islands in the Canadian Arctic are also covered. The produced datasets are freely available to all. A first subset of the data has been published on the Copernicus Data Store (CDS) in early 2021.

The reanalysis is perfomed with state-of-the-art data assimilation techniques that include many local quality-controlled observations that have not been included in previously published reanalysis datasets. The weather forecasting model HARMONIE-AROME cy40h1.1.1 has been used to produce the dataset. The model computations have additionally been optimized for processes essential in the Arctic. Estimated uncertainty data have been produced at atmospheric pressure levels, and validation statistics have been made for synoptic weather stations.

How to cite: Nielsen, K. P., Schyberg, H., Yang, X., Støylen, E., Dahlgren, P., Amstrup, B., Peralta, C., Køltzow, M., and Bojarova, J.: 24 years of C3S Arctic regional reanalysis, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15178, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15178, 2021.

EGU21-10175 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

First model evaluations of height-resolved diurnal water vapour cycles using lidar observations in an Arctic environment

Shannon Hicks-Jalali, Zen Mariani, Barbara Casati, Sylvie Leroyer, Francois Lemay, and Robert Crawford

Atmospheric water vapour is a critical component of both meteorological and climatological processes. It is the dominant gas in the greenhouse effect and its diurnal cycle is an essential component of the hydrological cycle. Diurnal water vapour cycles are complex and are a product of several mechanisms, including (but not necessarily limited to): evapotranspiration, advection, large-scale vertical motion, and precipitation. They are dependent on local geography, as well as latitude. Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) models rely on high-quality water vapour input to provide accurate forecasts, which is particularly difficult in the Arctic due to its extreme weather and harsh environment. Diurnal water vapour cycle observations are also excellent tools for evaluating NWPs due to their complex nature and dependence on multiple processes. Integrated water vapour (IWV), or total column, diurnal water vapour cycles, usually calculated with Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) instruments, have been the focus of most previous diurnal WV studies; however, height-resolved diurnal cycles provide a more complete picture of the diurnal mechanisms and include vertical motion, which cannot be discerned via IWV measurements. Differential Absorption Lidars (DIALs) are well suited to providing height-resolved diurnal cycles in the boundary layer due to their high vertical and temporal resolution.

We use the novel Vaisala pre-production DIAL, installed in Iqaluit, Nunavut (63.75 N, 68.55 W), to calculate seasonal height-resolved diurnal WV cycles from 100 m to 1500 m altitude. We also calculate the surface and total column WV diurnal cycles using co-located surface station and GNSS measurements. We find that the first 250 m of the DIAL diurnal cycle magnitudes agree well with the surface station measurements. The phases of the cycle do shift with altitude, and the amplitudes generally increase with altitude. In the summer, all instruments observe a strong 24 hr cycle. As the amount of solar radiation decreases over the year, the 24 hr cycle weakens and the 12 hr cycle begins to dominate in all instruments. While we find a strong correlation between the 24 hr cycle and the solar cycle, we do not observe any correlation between the 12 hr cycle and the solar cycle. Finally, we also compare the DIAL observations to the Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) NWP model. We evaluate both the assimilation of the humidity input and initial water vapour fields, as well as the diurnal cycle over the 24 hour forecast. Future work will include case study comparisons with the Canadian NWP model to assess the model’s ability to resolve rapid changes in diurnal water vapour.

How to cite: Hicks-Jalali, S., Mariani, Z., Casati, B., Leroyer, S., Lemay, F., and Crawford, R.: First model evaluations of height-resolved diurnal water vapour cycles using lidar observations in an Arctic environment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10175, 2021.

EGU21-10372 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Quantifying the impact of submesoscale dynamics on the evolution of Arctic freshwater fronts

Marion Alberty, Sonya Legg, Robert Hallberg, Jennifer MacKinnon, Janet Sprintall, Matthew Alford, John Mickett, and Elizabeth Fine

The dramatic decrease in Arctic sea ice has resulted in a corresponding increase in the seasonal freshwater flux due to melt water in the Canada Basin. This source of freshwater can be quite patchy as sea ice breaks aparts and melts, resulting in freshwater fronts that are strained and stirred by the mesoscale eddy field. We would like to understand the relevant processes that determine the evolution of these freshwater fronts and how heat and salt are exchanged between the fresh melt water and the background water masses. In particular we investigate the importance of submesoscale processes for the lateral and vertical exchange of heat and salt, using high resolution observations of a freshwater front in the Arctic to initialise idealised simulations of frontal evolution. We isolate the effect of submesoscale dynamics by comparing high resolution submesoscale-resolving simulations with lower resolution simulations permitting only larger-scale eddies. Comparisons with observed temperature wavenumber spectra will be presented to investigate whether the simulated dynamics are representative of observations. Heat and salt budgets are presented for the simulations and the impact of submesoscale dynamics on the balance between across-front ageostrophic and geostrophic transports will be discussed. We will also discuss the implications of these results on the seasonal redistribution of heat over the upper ocean, specifically do submesoscale dynamics lead to an increase in the vertical transport of heat across the base of the summer mixed layer, therefore increasing the heat content within the winter mixed layer and delaying the formation of sea ice in the fall?

How to cite: Alberty, M., Legg, S., Hallberg, R., MacKinnon, J., Sprintall, J., Alford, M., Mickett, J., and Fine, E.: Quantifying the impact of submesoscale dynamics on the evolution of Arctic freshwater fronts, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10372, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10372, 2021.

EGU21-8695 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Large-scale connections between Fram Strait recirculation and warm water pathways towards Greenland fjords

Rebecca McPherson, Torsten Kanzow, and Claudia Wekerle

In the last two decades, rising ocean temperatures have significantly contributed to the increased melting and retreat of marine-terminating glaciers along the coast of Greenland. Warming subsurface waters have also been shown to interact with the glaciers in Northeast Greenland, which until recently were considered stable, and caused their rapid retreat. The main source of these waters is the westward recirculation of subducted Atlantic Water (AW) in Fram Strait, which has shown a warming of up to 1° C over the past few decades.

In this study, the connection between the subsurface warm Atlantic Intermediate Water (AIW) found on the wide continental shelf of Northeast Greenland and in the fjords, and AW within the West Spitsbergen Current (WSC) is investigated using historical hydrographic observations and high-resolution numerical simulations with the Finite-Element Sea-ice Ocean Model (FESOM). We find that AW from the WSC takes between 10 – 14 months to recirculate across Fram Strait and reach the shelf break where it moves southwards. The pronounced inter-annual variability in the WSC is preserved as the water recirculates. However, the variability of temperature and AIW layer thickness on the shelf at seasonal or inter-annual time scales is at best weakly controlled by the AW temperature in the WSC. There is no significant correlation between AIW and the WSC anywhere on the shelf, suggesting advection from the WSC alone does not control AIW signals. The role of wind-driven, episodic upwelling is then investigated as a driver of transport of AIW from Fram Strait onto the shelf (following an approach by Münchow et al., 2020) where it then may follow the deep trough system towards the glaciers.

How to cite: McPherson, R., Kanzow, T., and Wekerle, C.: Large-scale connections between Fram Strait recirculation and warm water pathways towards Greenland fjords, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8695, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8695, 2021.

EGU21-9736 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Multi-decadal tropical-Arctic atmospheric teleconnections and their influences on Greenland Ice Sheet melt

Daniel Topal, Qinghua Ding, István Gábor Hatvani, and Thomas J Ballinger

Despite the contribution of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) to global sea level rise, the lack of a complete understanding of its driving mechanisms largely constrains future model projections. Brief observational records limit model development efforts, however, the assimilation of paleoclimatic proxy data in climate models provides new opportunities to place recent climate changes in and around the Arctic in the context of long-term high-latitude variability. Building off of previous work, we investigate the relative role of internal atmospheric variability in modulating GrIS surface mass balance (SMB) using the newly available Ensemble Kalman Fitting Paleo-Reanalysis (EKF400) version 2, with monthly resolution for the period 1602-2003 AD, and the Last Millennium Reanalysis (LMR) version 2, which has an annual resolution from 0-2000 AD. We apply maximum covariance and empirical orthogonal function analyses on these two datasets to reveal co-varying patterns of Arctic upper-tropospheric changes and the GrIS SMB over centennial and millennial timescales with a special focus on remote tropical drivers of this local coupling. In light of these tropical-Arctic linkages in shaping GrIS conditions over the past two millennia, the application of proxy-assimilated model experiments provides deeper insights into the formation of such atmospheric dynamical connections that may impact GrIS SMB in the future.

I.G.H is supported by the Ministry of Human Capacties (NTP-NFTÖ-20-B-0043).

How to cite: Topal, D., Ding, Q., Hatvani, I. G., and Ballinger, T. J.: Multi-decadal tropical-Arctic atmospheric teleconnections and their influences on Greenland Ice Sheet melt, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9736, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9736, 2021.

EGU21-3555 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Montreal Protocol to delay ice-free Arctic by a decade

Mark England and Lorenzo Polvani

Recent work has shown that a rapid rise in the emission of ozone depleting substances resulted in substantial Arctic warming and accelerated Arctic sea ice loss over the second half of the twentieth century. However, ozone depleting substances have been heavily regulated since the Montreal Protocol entered into effect in 1989, and their atmospheric concentrations have been stabilized and are now decreasing. This raises the obvious and important questions of the impact of the Montreal Protocol on climate change in the Arctic.

More specifically we are here interested in quantifying the impact of the Montreal Protocol on the date of the first ice-free Arctic summer (defined as the first occurrence of Arctic sea ice extent below 1 million km2). The timing of the ice-free Arctic is of great interest both to stakeholders in the Arctic and to the scientific community.

To address this question, we have performed and analyzed ten-member ‘World Avoided’ companion ensembles to the CESM Large Ensemble (using RCP8.5 forcings) and to the CESM Medium Ensemble (using RCP4.5 forcings). The companion ensembles are identical to their CESM-LE and CESM-ME counterparts, respectively, except for the levels of ozone depleting substances which do not decrease following the Montreal Protocol, but instead increase at a rate of 3.5% a year. This allows us to isolate the effect of the Montreal Protocol on Arctic sea ice trends by simulating what would have happened if it had never been enacted (hence the name, ‘World Avoided’). We examine both RCP8.5 and RCP4.5 forcings, to quantify the uncertainty related to emissions scenarios over the coming decades.

We find that without the Montreal Protocol the mean date of the first ice-free Arctic advances from 2041 to 2033 for the RCP8.5 forcings, and from 2050 to 2035 for the RCP4.5 forcings. Thus, enacting the Montreal Protocol has delayed the onset of an ice-free Arctic by approximately one decade. This signal is robust when accounting for the high levels of internal variability in Arctic sea ice trends. Our results are also robust to different definitions of ‘ice-free Arctic’. Overall our results highlight the importance of the Montreal Protocol as a major climate mitigation treaty, even for the Arctic, where no ozone-hole has formed.

How to cite: England, M. and Polvani, L.: Montreal Protocol to delay ice-free Arctic by a decade, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3555, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3555, 2021.

EGU21-12914 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Natural variability and recent warming in central Greenland ice cores

Maria Hoerhold, Thomas Münch, Stefanie Weißbach, Sepp Kipfstuhl, Bo Vinther, Johannes Freitag, Gerrit Lohmann, and Thomas Laepple

Climate variability of the Arctic region has been investigated by means of temperature reconstructions based on proxies from various climate archives around the Arctic, compiled over the last 2000a in the so called Arctic2k record. However, the representativeness of the Arctic2k reconstruction for central Greenland remains unclear, since only a few ice cores have been included in the reconstruction, and observations from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GIC) report ambiguous warming trends for the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century which are not displayed by Arctic2k. Today, the GIC experiences periods with temperatures close to or above the freezing point at high elevations, area-wide melting and mass loss. In order to assess the recent warming as signature of global climate change, records of past climate changes with appropriate temporal and spatial coverage can serve as a benchmark for naturally driven climate variability. Instrumental records for Greenland are short and geographically sparse, and existing temperature reconstructions from single ice cores are noisy, leading to an inconclusive assessment of the recent warming for Greenland.

Here, we provide a Greenland firn-core stack covering the time span of the last millennium until the first decade of the 21st century in unprecedented quality by re-drilling as well as analyzing 16 existing firn core sites. We find a strong decadal to bi-decadal natural variability in the record, and, while the record exhibits several warming events with trends that show a similar amplitude as the recent one, we find that the recent absolute values of stable oxygen isotope composition are unprecedented for the last 1000 years.

 

Comparing our Greenland record with the Arctic 2k temperature reconstruction shows that the correlation between the two records changes throughout the last millennium. While in the periods of 1200-1300 and 1400-1650 CE the records correlate positively, between 1300 and 1400 and 1650-1700 CE shorter periods with negative correlation are found. Since then the correlation is characterized by alternation between positive and zero correlation, with a drop towards negative values at the end of the 20th century. Including re-analysis data, we hypothesize that the climate on top of the GIC was decoupled from the surrounding Arctic for the last decades, leading to the observed mismatch in observations of warming trends.

We suggest that the recently observed Greenland temperatures are a superposition of a strong natural variability with an anthropogenic long-term trend. Our findings illustrate that global warming has reached the interior of the Greenland ice sheet, which will have implications for its surface mass balance and Greenland’s future contribution to sea level rise.

Our record complements the Arctic 2k record to a profound view on the Arctic climate variability, where regional compilations may not be representative for specific areas.

How to cite: Hoerhold, M., Münch, T., Weißbach, S., Kipfstuhl, S., Vinther, B., Freitag, J., Lohmann, G., and Laepple, T.: Natural variability and recent warming in central Greenland ice cores, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12914, 2021.

EGU21-14024 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7 | Highlight

Modern warming exceeds sea surface temperatures of the Holocene Thermal Maximum in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard

Harikrishnan Guruvayoorappan, Arto Miettinen, Dmitry Divine, and Rahul Mohan

Certain past climatic events act as an analogue for future climatic conditions. The Holocene epoch featured a number of climatic variations of which Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) stands out as a recognizable phenomenon, especially in the North Atlantic and the Arctic. Similar to modern warming, HTM in Svalbard recorded extreme warmth along with intense deglaciation and sea ice retreat. Therefore, predictions of future climate using HTM depends on understanding the changes in interactions between ocean, sea ice, and atmospheric conditions. While many studies exist on this period, only few have reconstructed ocean surface conditions in the Arctic at high resolution. Here we present the first diatom-based high-resolution quantitative reconstruction of sea surface conditions from Kongsfjorden, Svalbard covering the period of ca. 10.5 to 7.5 cal. kyr BP. Our reconstructions of sea surface temperature (SST) and sea ice conditions are based on diatom microfossil records from a 454 cm long marine sediment core from Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The section from 454 to 300 cm was used for reconstructions owing to the lack of availability of diatom microfossils. Owing to their high sensitivity towards SST and sea ice, diatoms act as excellent proxies of these environmental conditions in the past. The SST record from Kongsfjorden reveals moderately warm open water conditions and highly variable sea ice conditions during the HTM. The SST achieves maximum values during the early Holocene insolation maxima ca. 10.5 to 7.5 cal. kyr BP, followed by a slow cooling trend simultaneously with the decreasing insolation intensity. Our results emphasize the regional heterogeneity observed in ocean surfaces during the HTM and how modern warming in the study area has already reached sea surface temperatures comparable to the HTM. 

How to cite: Guruvayoorappan, H., Miettinen, A., Divine, D., and Mohan, R.: Modern warming exceeds sea surface temperatures of the Holocene Thermal Maximum in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14024, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14024, 2021.

EGU21-14309 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Holocene sea-ice dynamics in Petermann Fjord 

Henrieka Detlef, Brendan Reilly, Anne Jennings, Mads Mørk jensen, Matt O'Regan, Marianne Glasius, Jesper Olsen, Martin Jakobsson, and Christof Pearce

Today Nares Strait is covered by sea ice for 11 months per year. The seasonal sea-ice regime and formation of landfast ice depend on the development of ice arches. Historically a northern and southern ice arch have been observed in Robeson Channel and Smith Sound, respectively, with only the southern arch leading to a complete freeze up of the strait. In recent decades, the northern arch has become more prominent, indicating a regime shift in Nares Strait sea-ice dynamics with important consequences for the export of ice from the Lincoln Sea, the regional oceanography, and the ecosystem related to the annual opening of the North Water Polynya lee of the southern ice arch. Modelling studies suggest a link between mobile sea ice and enhanced Ekman transport of modified Atlantic Water to Greenland fjord systems bordering Nares Strait. Further, a reduction in the fjords’ fast ice season, in response to Nares Strait sea-ice dynamics, might decrease its buttressing effect on the marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northern Greenland. One such glacier is Petermann Glacier, draining 4% of the Greenland Ice Sheet and terminating in a 48 km long ice tongue in Petermann Fjord.

The Petermann 2015 Expedition to Petermann Fjord and adjacent Hall Basin recovered a transect of cores from Nares Strait to under the 48 km long ice tongue of Petermann glacier. First results suggest that no ice tongue existed in Petermann Fjord for large parts of the Holocene, raising the question of the role of the ocean and the marine cryosphere in the collapse and re-establishment of the ice tongue. We present a multi-proxy study (sea-ice related biomarkers, total organic carbon and its carbon isotopic composition, and benthic and planktonic foraminiferal abundances) exploring the Holocene sea-ice dynamics at site OD1507-03TC-41GC-03PC in outer Petermann Fjord. Our results are in line with a tight coupling of the marine and terrestrial cryosphere in this region and, in connection with other regional sea-ice reconstructions, give insights into the Holocene evolution of ice arches and associated landfast ice in Nares Strait.

How to cite: Detlef, H., Reilly, B., Jennings, A., Mørk jensen, M., O'Regan, M., Glasius, M., Olsen, J., Jakobsson, M., and Pearce, C.: Holocene sea-ice dynamics in Petermann Fjord , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14309, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14309, 2021.

EGU21-9301 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Radiogenic Isotope Signatures of Holocene Sediments from Kane Basin: Linkage with the Re-opening and Evolution of Nares Strait

Lina Madaj, Friedrich Lucassen, Claude Hillaire-Marcel, and Simone A. Kasemann

The re-opening of the Arctic Ocean-Baffin Bay gateway through Nares Strait, following the Last Glacial Maximum, has been partly documented, discussed and revised in the past decades. The Nares Strait opening has led to the inception of the modern fast circulation pattern carrying low-salinity Arctic water towards Baffin Bay and further towards the Labrador Sea. This low-salinity water impacts thermohaline conditions in the North Atlantic, thus the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Available land-based and marine records set the complete opening between 9 and 7.5 ka BP [1-2], although the precise timing and intensification of the southward flowing currents is still open to debate. A recent study of a marine deglacial sedimentary record from Kane Basin, central Nares Strait, adds information about subsequent paleoceanographic conditions in this widened sector of the strait and proposed the complete opening at ~8.3 ka BP [3].

We present complementary radiogenic strontium, neodymium and lead isotope data of the siliciclastic detrital sediment fraction of this very record [3] further documenting the timing and pattern of Nares Strait opening from a sediment provenance approach. The data permit to distinguish detrital material from northern Greenland and Ellesmere Island, transported to the core location from both sides of Nares Strait. Throughout the Holocene, the evolution of contributions of these two sources hint to the timing of the ice break-up in Kennedy Channel, north of Kane Basin, which led to the complete opening of Nares Strait [3]. The newly established gateway of material transported to the core location from the north via Kennedy Channel is recorded by increased contribution of northern Ellesmere Island detrital sediment input. This shift from a Greenland (Inglefield Land) dominated sediment input to a northern Ellesmere Island dominated sediment input supports the hypothesis of the newly proposed timing of the complete opening of Nares Strait at 8.3 ka BP [3] and highlights a progressive trend towards modern-like conditions, reached at about 4 ka BP.

References:

[1] England (1999) Quaternary Science Reviews, 18(3), 421–456. [2] Jennings et al. (2011) Oceanography, 24(3), 26-41. [3] Georgiadis et al. (2018) Climate of the Past, 14 (12), 1991-2010.

How to cite: Madaj, L., Lucassen, F., Hillaire-Marcel, C., and Kasemann, S. A.: Radiogenic Isotope Signatures of Holocene Sediments from Kane Basin: Linkage with the Re-opening and Evolution of Nares Strait, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9301, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9301, 2021.

EGU21-6840 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

A 400-year record of glaciomarine sedimentation associated with the dynamics of the Penny Ice Cap (Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada)

María-Emilia Rodríguez-Cuicas, Jean-Carlos Montero-Serrano, Guillaume St-Onge, and Alexandre Normandeau

Climatological studies show that Baffin Island ice caps (Barnes and Penny) are highly sensitive to global climatic changes. However, there is little high temporal resolution data available to study the long-term response of Baffin Island ice caps to climate change. While most of the sedimentary climate records in the region are obtained from lake sediments, there is less information from glaciomarine sediments. High sedimentation rates that characterize fjords in glaciomarine environments make these sites ideal to study the impact of climate and oceanographic changes on tidewater glacier dynamics at high-temporal resolution. In this context, a piston core (AMD2019-804-12PC) recovered in the Coronation Fjord (Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada) in an ice-proximal environment was investigated using physical, grain-size, mineralogical, geochemical, and magnetic properties to document changes in sediment transfers from the Penny Ice Cap (PIC) in relation to Late Holocene climate variability. The chronostratigraphic framework of this core was developed by combining AMS 14C and paleomagnetic analysis. The physical and sedimentological analysis show that core 12PC is characterized by laminated mud sediments interspersed with fine sand and disseminated ice-rafted debris (IRD). The biotite+chlorite-plagioclase-feldspar ternary diagram reveals a homogeneous detrital input with a composition characteristic of the Cumberland Batholith. These sedimentary characteristics are interpreted as a product of suspension settling and muddy density flows from turbid meltwater plumes related with the PIC dynamic. Results also reveal two lithofacies (LF) related with distinct glacial regimes. LF1 (601-280 cm; 1500-1800 AD), which covers the Little Ice Age period, is characterized by a high IRD content, below-average values in biotite+chlorite/quartz, low variations in Zr/Ti and Fe/Al, suggesting enhanced tidewater glacier discharge likely associated with the growth of the PIC. LF2 (280-0 cm; 1800 AD to present) is defined by a decrease in IRD content, above-average values in biotite+chlorite/quartz, and high variations in Zr/Ti and Fe/Al, interpreted as representing the retreat of the glacier to its present-day extent in response to modern warming. Similar trends observed between our detrital proxies and the Arctic surface air temperature anomalies, the chironomid-inferred summer-temperature from a nearby lake, and melt feature record from the PIC, suggest high connectivity between atmospheric temperatures variations and the sedimentary dynamics of the PIC during the last 400 years.

How to cite: Rodríguez-Cuicas, M.-E., Montero-Serrano, J.-C., St-Onge, G., and Normandeau, A.: A 400-year record of glaciomarine sedimentation associated with the dynamics of the Penny Ice Cap (Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6840, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6840, 2021.

EGU21-6426 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Holocene variability of the northeastern Laurentide Ice Sheet in the Clyde Inlet area, western Baffin Bay, from radiogenic isotope records in marine sediments

Johanna Hingst, Claude Hillaire-Marcel, Friedrich Lucassen, Christoph Vogt, Emmanuel Okuma, and Simone Kasemann

The reconstruction of late glacial ice sheet fluctuations helps understanding and modelling the local glacio-isostatic adjustment as well as global eustatic changes. From this viewpoint, the large-scale spatial and temporal variations of the Fox Basin-Baffin Island ice dome (NE Laurentide Ice Sheet, Canada) have been well documented. However, high frequency Holocene fluctuations and final decay of it are still poorly documented. We have thus investigated the behaviour of one of its eastern outlet glaciers in the Clyde Inlet fjord, northeastern Baffin Island. The reconstruction of ice sheet margin fluctuation is based on the radiogenic isotope composition (Sr-Pb-Nd) and mineral assemblage of detrital sediments in two marine cores raised within and off the Clyde Inlet (GeoB22346-3, Clyde Inlet head; GeoB22357-3, adjacent continental shelf). Radiogenic isotope ratios and bulk mineral assemblages from such sites are imprints of bedrock erosion along the active ice margin, as well as along ice-streams and subglacial drainage patterns. They may thus be used for the reconstruction of spatial and temporal variations in meltwater discharge into Baffin Bay and of the position of the active margin fluctuations inland. The location of the two sediment cores also informs on the traceability of radiogenic isotope signals from proximal to more distal areas of sediment deposition. Changes in mineralogical and radiogenic isotope compositions at the proximal core site suggest ice margin and drainage fluctuations rather than a constant retreat throughout the Holocene. Shelf sediment provenances are dominated by relatively homogenized Baffin Island inputs during the mid to late Holocene, but record a slightly offshore ice margin position from the late Pleistocene to the early Holocene.

How to cite: Hingst, J., Hillaire-Marcel, C., Lucassen, F., Vogt, C., Okuma, E., and Kasemann, S.: Holocene variability of the northeastern Laurentide Ice Sheet in the Clyde Inlet area, western Baffin Bay, from radiogenic isotope records in marine sediments, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6426, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6426, 2021.

EGU21-15076 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Early Holocene ocean conditions off the Zachariæ Isstrøm, Northeast Greenland

Joanna Davies, Anders Møller Mathiasen, Kristiane Kristensen, Christof Pearce, and Marit-Solveig Seidenkrantz

The polar regions exhibit some of the most visible signs of climate change globally; annual mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) has quadrupled in recent decades, from 51 ± 65 Gt yr−1 (1992-2001) to 211 ± 37 Gt yr−1 (2002-2011). This can partly be attributed to the widespread retreat and speed-up of marine-terminating glaciers. The Zachariae Isstrøm (ZI) is an outlet glacier of the Northeast Greenland Ice Steam (NEGIS), one of the largest ice streams of the GrIS (700km), draining approximately 12% of the ice sheet interior. Observations show that the ZI began accelerating in 2000, resulting in the collapse of the floating ice shelf between 2002 and 2003. By 2014, the ice shelf extended over an area of 52km2, a 95% decrease in area since 2002, where it extended over 1040km2. Paleo-reconstructions provide an opportunity to extend observational records in order to understand the oceanic and climatic processes governing the position of the grounding zone of marine terminating glaciers and the extent of floating ice shelves. Such datasets are thus necessary if we are to constrain the impact of future climate change projections on the Arctic cryosphere.

A multi-proxy approach, involving grain size, geochemical, foraminiferal and sedimentary analysis was applied to marine sediment core DA17-NG-ST8-92G, collected offshore of the ZI, on  the Northeast Greenland Shelf. The aim was to reconstruct changes in the extent of the ZI and the palaeoceanographic conditions throughout the Early to Mid Holocene (c.a. 12,500-5,000 cal. yrs. BP). Evidence from the analysis of these datasets indicates that whilst there has been no grounded ice at the site over the last 12,500 years, the ice shelf of the ZI extended as a floating ice shelf over the site between 12,500 and 9,200 cal. yrs. BP, with the grounding line further inland from our study site. This was followed by a retreat in the ice shelf extent during the Holocene Thermal Maximum; this was likely to have been governed, in part, by basal melting driven by Atlantic Water (AW) recirculated from Svalbard or from the Arctic Ocean. Evidence from benthic foraminifera suggest that there was a shift from the dominance of AW to Polar Water at around 7,500 cal. yrs. BP, although the ice shelf did not expand again despite of this cooling of subsurface waters.

How to cite: Davies, J., Møller Mathiasen, A., Kristensen, K., Pearce, C., and Seidenkrantz, M.-S.: Early Holocene ocean conditions off the Zachariæ Isstrøm, Northeast Greenland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15076, 2021.

EGU21-15295 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

The Last Glacial Maximum in northern Baffin Bay

Karen Søby Özdemir, Henrieka Detlef, Linda Lambertucci, and Christof Pearce

Little is known about climate and ocean conditions during the Last Glacial Maximum in Baffin Bay, Greenland. This is partly due to the dissolution of biogenic carbonates in the central Baffin Bay, preventing reliable 14C-chronologies. We present the results from a transect of gravity cores retrieved during the 2019 BIOS cruise on the HDMS Lauge Koch in the northern Baffin Bay. Core LK19-ST8-14G has been analyzed for grain size variations, sea-ice biomarkers, XRF, and color spectrophotometry. A preliminary chronology based on radiocarbon dates from foraminifera show that the bottom of the core is approximately 35.000 cal. years BP while the top sediments are of Late Holocene age. The sediment archive thus covers the full extent of the LGM and the last deglaciation. High-resolution photography and CT scans allowed the identification of distinctly different lithofacies in the sediment archive. The lower sections of the core are characterized by laminated mud with no IRD and absence of microfossils indicating a sub ice-shelf environment during the glacial period. The laminated sequence is interrupted by several coarser, detrital-carbonate (DC) rich layers which are interpreted as episodes of glacial retreat or ice-shelf collapse. The youngest of these DC layers immediately precedes the Holocene, which is represented by approximately 40 cm of bioturbated sediments with some IRD. This interpretation is supported by the concentrations of HBIs and sterols throughout the core, which indicate near perennial ice cover in the glacial northern Baffin Bay and more open water conditions during the Holocene.

How to cite: Søby Özdemir, K., Detlef, H., Lambertucci, L., and Pearce, C.: The Last Glacial Maximum in northern Baffin Bay, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15295, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15295, 2021.

Periodic mass discharges of icebergs from the Laurentide ice-sheet into the North Atlantic Ocean during the last glacial period deposited abundant ice-rafted detritus (IRD) accumulated in sequences of typically six major Heinrich Event layers, each with some tens of cm thickness, at all eastern slopes of the Grand Banks submarine platform of Newfoundland. Compositionally, it is well established that these IRD layers consist of varied rock contents emanating from distinct, but not yet clearly defined bedrock provinces of the Canadian Shield. The, most prominently reported constituent is detrital dolomite, but the entire lithological range of the IRD is much broader. Rock magnetic records, e.g. magnetic susceptibility logs of SE Grand Banks cores, therefore depict complex and partly repeating internal substructures across the Heinrich Event layers owing to distinct successions in IRD lithology over the course of every mass calving event.

We investigated IRD sieve fractions (1mm – 4cm) of the entire glacial section (550–1054 cm) of SE Grand Banks slope gravity core GeoB 18530-1, sampled in 2.3 cm steps. Therefrom, we identified and classified distinct IRD rock types as well as monocrystalline rock-forming mineral particles, for which we established so far 24 well-defined lithological categories of sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic origin. This initial identification of IRD lithology was performed based on all available visual criteria including texture (crystallinity, grain-size), color and translucency (mineralogy), hardness and surface structures (e.g., cleavage) using a binocular microscope. This rock type classification is now being substantiated by polarized light microscopy of exemplary thin sections created from larger IRD clasts.

To established cumulative rock magnetic fingerprints of all IRD magnetic mineral assemblages, isothermal remanent magnetization acquisition curves of all sieve fractions as well as individual specimens of all the classified rock types have been measured. These records systematically revealed higher concentrations of magnetic minerals at the tops and bottoms of most Heinrich Event layers and also clear variations in coercivity spectra. This finding is mirrored by the IRD rock count records, where magmatic rock types predominate mostly at Heinrich Event layer boundaries. Preferred deposition of these IRD rock types during the initiation and ending of events and their variation from older to younger events,- highlight repetitive patterns in the cyclic Laurentide ice-sheet collapses to be further explored.

How to cite: Bukar, S., von Dobeneck, T., and Lisker, F.: Investigating the internal lithological structure and rock magnetic signature of Heinrich Event layers at SE Grand Banks Slope, Newfoundland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15610, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15610, 2021.

EGU21-10594 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Last Interglacial sea ice variability and paleoceanography of the Labrador Sea

Kristine Steinsland, Ulysess Ninnemann, Kirsten Fahl, Rüdiger Stein, Danielle Grant, and Stijn De Schepper

Sea ice provides strong feedback in the climate system, and it plays an important role in modulating the strength of the Thermohaline Circulation through glacials, and even interglacials. The warmer than present Last Interglacial (LIG, ~116-128 ka) is thought to have a less stable climate than the current interglacial. Proxies from the deep- and surface subpolar North Atlantic Ocean show prominent instabilities pointing toward coupled ocean-climate variability.  Here we reconstruct sea surface and sea ice changes of the subpolar gyre through the penultimate deglaciation and LIG in order to evaluate sea ice’s role as a driver and amplifier of these ocean circulation and climate changes. We reconstruct the sea ice and sea surface conditions using biomarkers (IP25, sterols) and dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from the Eirik Drift. Low productivity combined with an absence of IP25 could indicate a potential full sea ice cover through MIS 6. The surface ocean experienced large variability through the first half of the LIG, including an early cooling with potential seasonal sea ice cover evident from the dinoflagellate cyst assemblage and IP25. The peak warm period of the LIG is seen in the second half, followed by a brief cooling period towards the end. Following the LIG, MIS 5d is characterized by an IP25 signal and high relative abundances of round brown dinocysts indicating cooling with seasonal sea ice cover. Initial comparisons with deep ventilation proxies (benthic foraminiferal δ13C data) indicate a potential close link between sea ice, surface hydrography and deep circulation. In future studies, we aim to compare the sea ice record to benthic foraminiferal δ13C data from the same samples to better understand the connection between surface and deep-ocean variability.

 

How to cite: Steinsland, K., Ninnemann, U., Fahl, K., Stein, R., Grant, D., and De Schepper, S.: Last Interglacial sea ice variability and paleoceanography of the Labrador Sea, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10594, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10594, 2021.

EGU21-350 | vPICO presentations | CL4.7

Widespread ice sheet retreat in southern Greenland associated with northward expansion and warming of North Atlantic subtropical water masses

Antoon Kuijpers, Camilla S. Andresen, and Antje H. L. Voelker

In the past decades a northward expansion of North Atlantic subtropical water masses1-3 and warming of subtropical mode water4,5 (350 – 400 m depth) has been observed. Paleoceanographic records from interglacials prior to 400 ka (‘early Brunhes ‘) reveal a marked inter-hemispheric climate asymmetry with  the average position of the ocean subtropical front in the eastern North Atlantic having shifted at least 4o latitude to the north6,7. Northward displacement of climate and vegetation belts and previously inferred reduction in sea ice cover at northern high latitudes7 has later been confirmed by modelling studies8. North Atlantic ocean circulation was characterized by an enhanced eastern boundary current poleward transport of warm, (sub)tropical  water masses both at surface and subsurface depth9,10.  In recent years (paleo)oceanographic studies of Greenland fjords  have demonstrated  that ‘warm’ and saline subsurface water masses of subtropical origin are responsible for sub-glacial melting processes  of Greenland  tide- water glaciers11-13. In periods of the early Brunhes interglacials (MIS 11, 13, 15) during which the eastern North Atlantic was characterized by enhanced northward transport of warm, (sub)tropical water masses9,10, large parts of the southern Greenland Ice Sheet had melted away and a boreal forest could develop here14,15 . We conclude that at that time the presence of much warmer, subtropical water masses at subsurface depth in Greenland fjords combined with advection of warm, subtropical air masses with increased precipitation potential from the expanded ocean subtropical gyre region had been responsible for widespread melting of the southern Greenland Ice Sheet. Presently, ongoing  northward expansion and warming of North Atlantic subtropical water masses must therefore be considered to be a process leading to further acceleration of widespread melting of the  (southern) Greenland Ice Sheet.    

  • 1)   Polovina, J.J. et al. 2008. Geophys. Res. Lett. 35 (3), doi:10.1029/2007GL031745
  • 2)   Frundt, B. et al. 2013. Progr. Oceanogr. 116, 246-260, doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2013.07.004
  • 3)   Yang, H. et al. 2020. Geophys. Res. Lett. 47 (5), doi:10.1029/2019GL085868
  • 4)   Sugimoto, S. et al. 2017. Nature Clim. Change 7, 656-658, doi:10.1038/nclimate3371
  • 5)   Wu, L. et al. 2012. Nature Change 2, 161-166, doi:10.1038/nclimate1353
  • 6)   Jansen, J.H.F. 1986. Science 232, 619-622
  • 7)   Kuijpers, A. Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclimat., Palaeoecol. 76, 67-83
  • 8)   Kleinen, T. et al. 2014. Quat. Intern. 348, 247-265, doi:10.1016/j.quaint.2013.12.028
  • 9)   Volker, A.H.L. et al. 2010. Clim. Past, 6, 531–552,doi:10.5194/cp-6-531-2010
  • 10) Maiorano, P. et al. 2015. Glob. Change 133, 35-48. doi:10.1016/j.glopacha.2015.07.009
  • 11) Straneo, F., Heimbach, P. 2013. Nature 504, 36-43
  • 12) Adresen, C.S. et al. 2011. The Holocene 21(2), 211-224, doi:10.1177/0959683610378877
  • 13) Andresen, C.S. et al. 2013. Shelf. Res. 71, 45-51, doi:10.1016/j.cst.2013.10.003
  • 14) Willerslev, E. et al., 2007. Science 317 (5834), 111-114
  • 15) De Vernal, A. and Hillaire-Marcel, C., 2008. Science 320, 1622-1625

How to cite: Kuijpers, A., Andresen, C. S., and Voelker, A. H. L.: Widespread ice sheet retreat in southern Greenland associated with northward expansion and warming of North Atlantic subtropical water masses, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-350, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-350, 2021.

CL4.11 – Extreme weather events and their impacts in the Andes and surrounding regions: observational, paleoclimate and modeling perspectives

EGU21-2477 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Estimating the snow-rain transition zone in a semi-arid Andean catchment

Simone Schauwecker, Gabriel Palma, Shelley MacDonell, and Katerina Goubanova

The height of the snow-rain transition during infrequent but high impact precipitation events, closely related to the 0⁰C-isotherm, is a crucial variable for snow cover extent, high discharge flows and flash floods in semi-arid northern Chile. Estimations of the snow-rain transition zone and its past and future changes are therefore fundamental for adaptation strategies and might eventually serve to develop early warning systems in this region. However, there are important challenges that hinder the assessment of the snow-rain transition zone in semi-arid environments and little is known about past and future changes under different global warming scenarios. For example, there are few radiosonde observations along the Andes and most weather stations are located in valley bottoms, influenced by local conditions and the assumption of free-air temperature lapse rates contributes to the uncertainty. We combine different data sets to estimate the past snow-rain transition zone of our study site, the semi-arid Elqui river catchment. Pictures of the snow line after precipitation events - available from social networks - are used to visually estimate the snow line elevation. These values are in high agreement with vertically extrapolated temperature from meteorological stations. Furthermore, we identified considerable biases between the extrapolated 0⁰C-isotherm from meteorological stations and ERA5 reanalysis data. These large biases are probably due to the lowering of the freezing level over complex terrain and need further analysis. Our results contribute to an improved understanding of the snow-rain transition in this region, but also serve to derive a climatology of this key variable along the Andes mountain range, needed for future projections.

How to cite: Schauwecker, S., Palma, G., MacDonell, S., and Goubanova, K.: Estimating the snow-rain transition zone in a semi-arid Andean catchment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2477, 2021.

EGU21-3161 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Projected changes of Precipitation over the far Eastern Tropical Pacific and Western Colombia

Juliana Valencia and John F. Mejía

The far Eastern Tropical Pacific and Western Colombia is one of the rainiest places on Earth, and the Choco low-level jet (ChocoJet) is one of the processes that influence the formation of precipitation and convection organization in this region. This study examines projected changes in precipitation using historical and future simulations based on the NCAR Community Climate System Model (CCSM2, 4) and the Community Earth System Model (CESM2), contributing to the Coupled Model Inter-Comparison Project phases 3, 5, and 6 (CMIP3, 5, and 6).  We use detailed process-based diagnostic approaches to evaluate the ability of the models in simulating ChocoJet and precipitation relationships at different temporal scales, from daily to interannual.  Overall, day-to-day positive disturbances in ChocoJet relate to an increase in intense precipitation events.  This relationship is found even in locations far inland in the intermountain valleys of the Colombian Andes. Our results show that relative to CMIP3 and CMIP5 the CMIP6-CESM2 historical simulations show a considerable improvement of precipitation spatio-temporal distribution, with the day-to-day variability and precipitation response resembling more closely that of the observations.  In general, late 21st century simulations show a decrease in mean and extreme precipitation consistent the decreased ChocoJet activity.  The down trend in ChocoJet activity appears to be connected to a projected increase in frequency and intensity of the warm phase of ENSO.

How to cite: Valencia, J. and Mejía, J. F.: Projected changes of Precipitation over the far Eastern Tropical Pacific and Western Colombia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3161, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3161, 2021.

EGU21-6316 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Identification of Tropical Cyclones’ Critical Positions Associated with Extreme Precipitation Events in Central America

Hugo G. Hidalgo, Eric J. Alfaro, Franklin Hernández-Castro, and Paula M. Pérez-Briceño

Tropical cyclones are one of the most important causes of disasters in Central America. Using historical (1970–2010) tracks of cyclones in the Caribbean and Pacific basin, we identify critical path locations where these low-pressure systems cause the highest number of floods in a set of 88 precipitation stations in the region. Results show that tropical cyclones from the Caribbean and Pacific basin produce a large number of indirect impacts on the Pacific slope of the Central American isthmus. Although the direct impact of a tropical cyclone usually results in devastation in the affected region, the indirect effects are more common and sometimes equally severe. In fact, the storm does not need to be an intense hurricane to cause considerable impacts and damage. The location of even a lower intensity storm in critical positions of the oceanic basin can result in destructive indirect impacts in Central America. The identification of critical positions can be used for emergency agencies in the region to issue alerts of possible flooding and catastrophic events.

How to cite: Hidalgo, H. G., Alfaro, E. J., Hernández-Castro, F., and Pérez-Briceño, P. M.: Identification of Tropical Cyclones’ Critical Positions Associated with Extreme Precipitation Events in Central America, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6316, 2021.

EGU21-6967 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11 | Highlight

Are extreme precipitation events becoming stronger and warmer in the Andes?

Miguel Lagos-Zúñiga, Pablo A. Mendoza, and Roberto Rondanelli

The Andes Cordillera serves as a physical barrier that modulates the atmospheric fluid dynamics, affecting the occurrence and intensity of precipitation events through orographic enhancement and the blocking and deviation of humidity transported by jets. The quantification of extreme precipitation events (EPEs) and their associated temperature is critical to address hydrological impacts and water availability for the Andes that also feeds the majority of the river and population in the region. 

As the atmosphere is getting warmer, the increasing amount of water vapor available in the troposphere is expected to enhance warm precipitation events during the 21st century. In this study, we examine observational trends in extreme precipitation events by season and analyze possible connections with air temperature. To this end, we perform Sen's Tests and compute Mann-Kendall values Maximum Precipitation daily precipitation and its associated temperature at ~80 meteorological stations. Then, we cluster the results geographically finding positive trends in high elevation areas for extreme precipitation events (EPEs) and their temperature, especially in mid-latitudes. In low stations (<800 m a.s.l.), we obtain a decrease in the magnitude of EPEs but and a decrease in air temperature (up to -0.4 [°C/decade]). In general, the temperature increase in EPEs for high elevation stations < 0.12 °C/year and could rise the freezing level up to 1000 [m], during the fall season.  The presented here suggest positive feedback between warmer atmospheric conditions and the open further pathways regarding hydrological impacts such as debris flow, floods, and less snow availability in the Andes regions.

How to cite: Lagos-Zúñiga, M., Mendoza, P. A., and Rondanelli, R.: Are extreme precipitation events becoming stronger and warmer in the Andes?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6967, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6967, 2021.

EGU21-9935 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Strong activity of the Orinoco Low-Level Jet and its association with moisture transport in northern South America

Alejandro Builes-Jaramillo, Johanna Yepes, and Hernán D. Salas

We classified events of extreme Orinoco Low-Level Jet (OLLJ) activity using the ERA5 time series of daily winds at 925 hPa averaged over the 6°S–8°N/67°W–69°W area for the period 1981-2019. This area exhibits an overall mean of 3.7 m/s easterly wind speed and an overall standard deviation of 3.5 m/s. Then, during December-January-February (June-July-August), the season of strong (weak) OLLJ activity, we defined the events below (above) one standard deviation from the overall mean. Hence, days with easterly wind speeds higher than 7.2 m/s are considered events with strong activity during DJF. In contrast, days with westerly wind speed higher than 0.2 m/s are the events with weak activity during JJA. A composite analysis of precipitation from CHIRPS dataset during the days classified as strong or weak OLLJ activity showed that during the most active period (DJF), daily precipitation values are close to 0 mm/day; except for increased precipitation in the border between Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil. In contrast, precipitation composites during the period of non-activity of the OLLJ (JJA), showed that precipitation increases in the range 5–10 mm/day along the OLLJ corridor. A detailed analysis of the precipitation time series used for composite analysis indicates that the probability of precipitation during DJF (JJA) is less (more) than 20% (80%) over Venezuela and the Guianas. In terms of advective water transport (qV) during the most active events of the OLLJ water is transported from the Tropical Atlantic towards northern South America through the OLLJ corridor, whilst during the less active events water transport along the OLLJ corridor comes from the north Amazon basin towards northern South America. In conclusion, during DJF the OLLJ is associated with the northerly cross-equatorial flow and dry season, whereas during JJA the southerly cross-equatorial flow from the Amazon river basin predominates, which contributes to the rainy season over the Orinoco region.

How to cite: Builes-Jaramillo, A., Yepes, J., and Salas, H. D.: Strong activity of the Orinoco Low-Level Jet and its association with moisture transport in northern South America, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9935, 2021.

EGU21-9980 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Identifying key driving mechanisms of heat waves in central Chile

Martín Jacques-Coper, Alan Demortier, and Deniz Bozkurt

This study explores the main drivers of heat wave (HW) events in central Chile using state-of-the-art reanalysis data (ERA5) and observations during the extended austral summer season (November to March) for the period 1979-2018. Frequency and intensity aspects of the HW events are considered using the total number of HW events per season and the amplitude, respectively. We first contrast ERA5 with several surface meteorological stations in central Chile to evaluate its ability to capture daily maximum temperature variability and the HW events. We then use synoptic- and large-scale fields and teleconnection patterns to address the most favorable conditions of the HW events from a climatological perspective, as well as for the extreme January 2017 HW event that swept central Chile with temperature records and wildfires. ERA5 tends to capture temperature extremes and the HW events at the inland stations; on the contrary, it has difficulties in capturing the maximum temperature variability at the coastal stations, which is plausible given the complex terrain features and confined coastal climate zone (only ~7% of all grid boxes within central Chile). The HW composite based on ERA5 reveals a mid-level trough-ridge dipole pattern exhibiting a blocking anticyclone on the surface over a large part of southwest South America. Relatively dry and warm easterly flow appears to accompany the anomalous warming in a large part of central Chile. The temporal evolution of the HW events yields a wave-like propagation pattern and enhancement of trough-ridge pattern along the South Pacific. This meridional dipole pattern is found to be largely associated with the Pacific South American pattern. In addition, the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) appears to be a key component of the HW events in central Chile. In particular, while active MJO phases 2 and 7 promote sub-seasonal patterns that favor the South Pacific dipole mode, synoptic anomalies can superimpose on them and favor the formation of a migrating anticyclone over central-southern Chile and coastal lows over central Chile. Agreeing with the climatological findings, the extreme January 2017 HW analysis suggests that an eastward migratory mid-latitude trough-ridge pattern associated with the MJO phase 2 was at work. We highlight that, in addition to large- and synoptic-scale features, sub-synoptic processes such as coastal lows can have an important role in shaping the HW events and can lead to amplification of temperature extremes during the HW events.

How to cite: Jacques-Coper, M., Demortier, A., and Bozkurt, D.: Identifying key driving mechanisms of heat waves in central Chile, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9980, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9980, 2021.

EGU21-10264 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Simulation of Mesoscale Convective Systems near the Tropical Andes: Insights from Convection-Permitting Simulations of Two Events

J. Alejandro Martinez, Juan Carlos Camacho, Daniel Vasquez, Daniel Espinosa, and Paola A. Arias

Mesoscale Convective Systems (MCSs) are associated with an important fraction of total precipitation in the vicinity of the Tropical Andes, and are related to high impact weather events and extreme rainfall.  Important ingredients include input of moisture and synoptic conditions particular of each location, depending on the regional scale circulation and the local topography.  Convection-Permitting (CP) simulations can help to better describe events with MCSs, including details of surface processes, low-level moisture transport and mountain-related circulations. Here we present a description of two MCSs in the vicinity of the Tropical Andes based on gridded observation-based data (ERA5 and GPM), in situ measurements and CP simulations with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model.  One of the events took place near the Andes-Amazon transition region (Mocoa-Colombia), with, reportedly, more than 100mm of precipitation accumulated in 3 hours in one location, accompanied with strong low-level transport of moisture by the (nocturnal) Orinoco Low-Level Jet (OLLJ) and strong mid-tropospheric easterly winds towards the Andes, favorable for orographic enhancenment of precipitation.  The other event took place over the low-lands of the Magdalena-Cauca basin (Cordoba-Colombia), with an approximate size of 71304 km2 , according to its cloud top temperature pattern.  In this region a sea-breeze provides moisture from oceanic origin, and the nearby Andes might help to enhance low-level convergence via orographic blocking and other mountain-related effects.  Based on kilometer-scale CP simulations we describe details of the initiation and life cycle of these two MCSs as simulated by WRF, including a description of the low-level input of moisture provided by the sea-breeze and the nocturnal jet during the initiation and mature stages, the corresponding mesoscale circulations in the vicinity of the Andes, and the intensity of the simulated precipitation.  Preliminary 3-km simulations of the Mocoa event show the low-level flow blocking by the Andes, the enhanced orographic precipitation, and an underestimation of the maximum intensity of rainfall. This study might help on understanding the skill and limitations of CP simulations for representing weather systems associated to extreme rainfall in the Tropical Andes. 

How to cite: Martinez, J. A., Camacho, J. C., Vasquez, D., Espinosa, D., and Arias, P. A.: Simulation of Mesoscale Convective Systems near the Tropical Andes: Insights from Convection-Permitting Simulations of Two Events, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10264, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10264, 2021.

EGU21-10383 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11 | Highlight

Impact of strong El Niño events on river discharge in South America

Markus Deppner and Bedartha Goswami

The impact of the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on rivers are well known, but most existing studies involving streamflow data are severely limited by data coverage. Time series of gauging stations fade in and out over time, which makes hydrological large scale and long time analysis or studies of rarely occurring extreme events challenging. Here, we use a machine learning approach to infer missing streamflow data based on temporal correlations of stations with missing values to others with data. By using 346 stations, from the “Global Streamflow Indices and Metadata archive” (GSIM), that initially cover the 40 year timespan in conjunction with Gaussian processes we were able to extend our data by estimating missing data for an additional 646 stations, allowing us to include a total of 992 stations. We then investigate the impact of the 6 strongest El Niño (EN) events on rivers in South America between 1960 and 2000. Our analysis shows a strong correlation between ENSO events and extreme river dynamics in the southeast of Brazil, Carribean South America and parts of the Amazon basin. Furthermore we see a peak in the number of stations showing maximum river discharge all over Brazil during the EN of 1982/83 which has been linked to severe floods in the east of Brazil, parts of Uruguay and Paraguay. However EN events in other years with similar intensity did not evoke floods with such magnitude and therefore the additional drivers of the 1982/83  floods need further investigation. By using machine learning methods to infer data for gauging stations with missing data we were able to extend our data by almost three-fold, revealing a possible heavier and spatially larger impact of the 1982/83 EN on South America's hydrology than indicated in literature.

How to cite: Deppner, M. and Goswami, B.: Impact of strong El Niño events on river discharge in South America, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10383, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10383, 2021.

EGU21-12018 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Atmospheric monitoring with a new GNSS network in the south-central Andes

Nikolaos Antonoglou, Kyriakos Balidakis, Bodo Bookhagen, Galina Dick, Florian Zus, Jens Wickert, and Alejandro de la Torre

The Central Andes are characterized by a steep climatic and environmental gradient with large spatial and temporal variations of associated hydrological parameters. There are two main atmospheric processes that influence climate conditions in our study area in northwestern Argentina: the South American Monsoon System that transports moisture via the low-level jet and the orographic barrier of the Eastern Cordillera that forces focused rainfall at the windward facing slopes.
As part of the International Research Training Group-StRATEGy project, our research aims at monitoring integrated water vapour (IWV) in the south-central Andes, in order to track moisture propagation. In accordance with the needs of the research, we processed data from two new Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) ground stations that were installed in spring 2019 along with - already calculated - solutions that were derived from an existing network. We used 10 year-long time-series from 31 stations spanning an altitude range from 198 to 5141m asl and stretching from the mountain front to the interior of the mountain range. This enhanced network helped us to examine spatial correlations, as well as differences in behaviour of the IWV across the climatic gradient. Moreover, we retrieved the gradients of the IWV at single positions, in order to study seasonal correlations between wind and gradient direction.

How to cite: Antonoglou, N., Balidakis, K., Bookhagen, B., Dick, G., Zus, F., Wickert, J., and de la Torre, A.: Atmospheric monitoring with a new GNSS network in the south-central Andes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12018, 2021.

EGU21-13445 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

The hydroclimate-vegetation relationship in the Amazon basin during the last 20 years: an analysis focused on the southwestern region

Omar Gutierrez-Cori, Jhan Carlo Espinoza, Laurent Z X Li, Sly Wongchuig-Correa, Paola A. Arias, Josyane Ronchail, and Hans Segura

The relationship between multiple hydroclimatic variables and vegetation conditions in the upper Madeira Basin (southwestern Amazon) has been analyzed. Vegetative dynamics are characterized using NDVI dataset as an indicator of the photosynthetic capacities of vegetation. Hydroclimatic variability is analyzed using satellite-based precipitation datasets, observed river discharge, and satellite measurements of terrestrial water storage (TWS). Our results show that the vegetation in the Basin varies from energy- to water-limited. During the peak of the wet season (January-February), rainfall, discharge, and TWS are negatively correlated with NDVI (r=-0.48 to -0.65), suggesting that during this period the vegetation is mainly energy-dependent. Outside this period, these correlations are positive (r=0.55 to 0.9), suggesting that vegetation depends mainly on water availability. This higher water dependence is more noticeable during the vegetation dry season (VDS; June-October). Considering the predominant land cover types, differences in the hydroclimate-NDVI relationship are observed. Evergreen forests remain energy-limited during the beginning of the VDS, but they become water-dependent almost at the end. Savannas show a different behavior, where water dependence occurs months before the onset of the VDS. On the other hand, unlike the other variables, the TWS better explains the NDVI in evergreen forests during the VDS (r=0.7 to 0.85). This is probably because evergreen forests are more dependent on deep soil water. A spatial analysis between hydroclimatic variables and the NDVI shows the predominance of positive correlations in most of the basin. However, specific areas do not show significant correlations. The weak relationship in these areas is explained by two factors i) very wet conditions during most of the year in the "rainfall hotspot" regions, where the vegetation is not water-limited, and ii) recent land-use changes (deforestation) that break the natural response in the hydroclimate-vegetation system. These findings provide new evidence on the impacts of the land cover changes on the natural relationship between vegetation and hydroclimatic variability, which is particularly relevant given the increasing rates of deforestation in this region during recent years.

How to cite: Gutierrez-Cori, O., Espinoza, J. C., Z X Li, L., Wongchuig-Correa, S., Arias, P. A., Ronchail, J., and Segura, H.: The hydroclimate-vegetation relationship in the Amazon basin during the last 20 years: an analysis focused on the southwestern region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13445, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13445, 2021.

EGU21-15928 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11

Understanding the atmospheric connection between the western Amazon and the Altiplano: A modelling approach

Hans Segura, Clementine Junquas, Jhan Carlo Espinoza, and Thierry Lebel

The relationship between precipitation over the southern tropical Andes (STA; 20S-12S) and the Bolivian High has been revisited in a recent study (Segura et al., 2020). Western Amazon convection during the austral summer (DJF), which is located on the western side of the regional Hadley cell associated with the mature phase of the South America Monsoon System (SAMS), has been proposed as a new mechanism controlling interannual precipitation in this Andean region. This change in the controlling mechanisms is associated with the recent intensification of this regional Hadley cell, in particular, convection over the western Amazon, which has decreased the atmospheric stability in most of western tropical South America, including the southern tropical Andes. In this study, we explore the relationship of precipitation over the STA and these two atmospheric mechanisms by using the WRF model on a global scale to simulate 38 December-February seasons (1980-2017). First, we performed a series of experiments by changing the scheme of parametrization to select the one reproducing two characteristics of the SAMS: the regional Hadley Cell and the Bolivian High. On the other hand, the best set of parameterization schemes, even if reproducing these two climatic features, presented bias in precipitation and atmospheric circulation over South America. Additionally, WRF could not reproduce the long-term variability of precipitation over the STA. Aside from these expected biases, precipitation over the STA is also related to both identified mechanisms (the Bolivian High and the regional Hadley cell) in WRF simulation. Using the moist static energy approach, we explore the reasons for the relationship between the precipitation over the STA and western Amazon convection. In the following experiment, we explore the influence of western Amazon convection on the regional circulation over South America by no permitting the development of deep convection in this Amazonian region.

How to cite: Segura, H., Junquas, C., Espinoza, J. C., and Lebel, T.: Understanding the atmospheric connection between the western Amazon and the Altiplano: A modelling approach, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15928, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15928, 2021.

EGU21-16244 | vPICO presentations | CL4.11 | Highlight

0.5 Degree: A Turning point

Jayaka Campbell, Michael Taylor, Arnoldo Bezanilla-Morlot, Tannecia Stephenson, Abel Centella-Artola, Leonardo Clarke, and Kimberly Stephenson

Although the Caribbean region is considered amongst the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate and climate change, there are very few regional studies or studies matching the regions small scale and size that evaluate or quantify the impacts of these future changes.  The absence becomes even more stark when the long-term temperature goals (LTTGs) of 1.5°C, 2.0°C and 2.5°C above pre-industrial warming levels are considered. By selecting, validating and downscaling a subset of the Hadley Centre’s 17-member Perturbed Physics Ensemble for the Quantifying Uncertainty in Model Predictions (QUMP) project, future changes for both the LTTGs as well as mid and end of century are evaluated, for the entire Caribbean and its six (6) sub-regional zones. Showing distinct and significant sub-regional variations, on average the Caribbean was found to be 2.1°C (>4°C) warmer and 40% (70%) drier by mid-century (end of century). Analysis of the LTTGS shows that the region surpasses lowest target, 1.5 °C, before the end of the 2020’s and experiences progressive warming that spread equatorward as successive thresholds are attained 2.0°C (2030’s) and 2.5°C (2050´s). The far western, the southern and the eastern Caribbean are found to be up to 50% drier at 1.5°C, with intensifications noted for changes at 2.0°C with a reversal of a wet tendency in the north and central Caribbean. The sub-regional variations that exist shows that although the Caribbean lags the globe in its attainment of the LTTGs some of its six subregions are more comparable to the global than the Caribbean mean with the transition from 1.5°C to 2.0°C seeming to represent a turning point for the Caribbean.

How to cite: Campbell, J., Taylor, M., Bezanilla-Morlot, A., Stephenson, T., Centella-Artola, A., Clarke, L., and Stephenson, K.: 0.5 Degree: A Turning point, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16244, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16244, 2021.

CL4.17 – Land–atmosphere interactions and climate extremes

EGU21-9028 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17 | Highlight

Soil moisture-atmosphere feedbacks mitigate declining water availability in drylands

Sha Zhou, A. Park Williams, Benjamin Lintner, Alexis Berg, Yao Zhang, Trevor Keenan, Benjamin Cook, Stefan Hagemann, Sonia Seneviratne, and Pierre Gentine

Global warming alters surface water availability (precipitation minus evapotranspiration, P-E) and hence freshwater resources. However, the influence of land-atmosphere feedbacks on future P-E changes and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that soil moisture (SM) strongly impacts future P-E changes, especially in drylands, by regulating evapotranspiration and atmospheric moisture inflow. Using modeling and empirical approaches, we find a consistent negative SM feedback on P-E, which may offset ~60% of the decline in dryland P-E otherwise expected in the absence of SM feedbacks. The negative feedback is not caused by atmospheric thermodynamic responses to declining SM, but rather reduced SM, in addition to limiting evapotranspiration, regulates atmospheric circulation and vertical ascent to enhance moisture transport into drylands. This SM effect is a large source of uncertainty in projected dryland P-E changes, underscoring the need to better constrain future SM changes and improve representation of SM-atmosphere processes in models.

How to cite: Zhou, S., Williams, A. P., Lintner, B., Berg, A., Zhang, Y., Keenan, T., Cook, B., Hagemann, S., Seneviratne, S., and Gentine, P.: Soil moisture-atmosphere feedbacks mitigate declining water availability in drylands, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9028, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9028, 2021.

EGU21-1185 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Surface energy balance and climatology changes from WRF simulations with different horizontal resolutions and soil configurations 

Almudena García-García, Francisco José Cuesta-Valero, Hugo Beltrami, Fidel González-Rouco, and Elena García-Bustamante

Interactions between the lower atmosphere and the shallow continental subsurface govern several surface processes important for ecosystems and society, such as extreme temperature and precipitation events. Transient climate simulations performed with climate models have been employed to study the water, mass and energy exchanges between the atmosphere and the shallow subsurface, obtaining large inter-model differences. Understanding the origin of differences between climate models in the simulation of near-surface conditions is crucial for restricting the inter-model variability of future climate projections. Here, we explore the effect of changes in horizontal resolution on the simulation of the surface energy balance and the climatology of near-surface conditions over North America (NA) using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. 
We analyzed an ensemble of twelve simulations using three different horizontal resolutions (25 km, 50 km and 100 km) and four different Land Surface Model (LSM) configurations over North America from 1980 to 2013. Our results show that increasing horizontal resolution alters the representation of shortwave radiation, affecting near-surface temperatures and consequently the partition of energy into sensible and latent heat fluxes. Thus, finer resolutions lead to higher net shortwave radiation and temperature at high NA latitudes and to lower net shortwave radiation and temperature at low NA latitudes. The use of finer resolutions also leads to an intensification of the terms associated with the surface water balance over coastal areas at low latitudes, generating higher latent heat flux, accumulated precipitation and soil moisture. The effect of the LSM choice is larger than the effect of horizontal resolution on the representation of the surface energy balance, and consequently on near-surface temperature. By contrast, the effect of the LSM configuration on the simulation of precipitation is weaker than the effect of horizontal resolution, showing larger differences among LSM simulations in summer and over regions with high latent heat flux. This ensemble of simulations is then compared against CRU data. Comparison between the CRU data and the simulated climatology of daily maximum and minimum temperatures and accumulated precipitation indicates that enhancing horizontal resolution marginally improves the simulated climatology of minimum and maximum temperatures in summer, while it leads to larger biases in accumulated precipitation. The larger biases in precipitation with the use of finer horizontal resolutions are likely related to the effect of increasing resolution on the atmospheric model component, since precipitation biases are similar using different LSM configurations.

How to cite: García-García, A., Cuesta-Valero, F. J., Beltrami, H., González-Rouco, F., and García-Bustamante, E.: Surface energy balance and climatology changes from WRF simulations with different horizontal resolutions and soil configurations , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1185, 2021.

EGU21-1419 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

The hidden signature of temperature-moisture couplings in the heat sensitivity of global crops

Corey Lesk, Ethan Coffel, Jonathan Winter, Deepak Ray, Jakob Zscheischler, Sonia Seneviratne, and Radley Horton

Rising air temperatures are a leading risk to global crop production and food security under climate change. Recent research has emphasized the critical role of moisture availability in regulating crop responses to heat and the importance of temperature-moisture couplings in the genesis of concurrent hot and dry conditions. Here, we demonstrate that the heat sensitivity of key global crops is dependent on the local strength of couplings between temperature and moisture in the climate system (namely, the interannual correlations of growing season temperature with evapotransipration and precipitation). Over 1970-2013, maize and soy yields declined more during hotter growing seasons where decreased precipitation and evapotranspiration more strongly accompanied higher temperatures. Based on this historical pattern and a suite of CMIP6 climate model projections, we show that changes in temperature-moisture couplings in response to warming could enhance the heat sensitivity of these crops as temperatures rise, worsening the impact of warming by ~5% on global average. However, these changes will benefit crops in some areas where couplings weaken, and are highly uncertain in others. Our results demonstrate that climate change will impact crops not only through warming, but also through changes in temperature-moisture couplings, which may alter the sensitivity of crop yields to heat as warming proceeds. Robust adaptation of cropping systems will need to consider this underappreciated risk to food production from climate change.

How to cite: Lesk, C., Coffel, E., Winter, J., Ray, D., Zscheischler, J., Seneviratne, S., and Horton, R.: The hidden signature of temperature-moisture couplings in the heat sensitivity of global crops, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1419, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1419, 2021.

EGU21-1706 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Long-term Trend Comparison of Planetary Boundary Layer Height in Observations and CMIP6 models over China

Man Yue, Minghuai Wang, Jianping Guo, Haipeng Zhang, Xinyi Dong, and Yawen Liu

The planetary boundary layer (PBL) plays an essential role in climate and air quality simulations. Large uncertainties remain in understanding the long-term trend of PBL height (PBLH) and its simulation. Here we use the radiosonde data and reanalysis datasets to analyze PBLH long-term trends over China, and to further evaluate the performance of CMIP6 climate models in simulating these trends. Results show that the observed long-term “positive to negative” trend shift of PBLH is related to the variation in the surface upward sensible heat flux (SHFLX) which is further controlled by the synergistic effect of low cloud cover (LCC) and soil moisture (SM) changes. Variabilities in low cloud cover and soil moisture directly influence the energy balance via surface net downward shortwave flux (SWF) and the latent heat flux (LHFLX), respectively. We have found that the CMIP6 climate models cannot reproduce the observed PBLH long-term trend shift over China. The CMIP6 results show an overwhelming continuous downward PBLH trend during the 1979-2014 period, which is caused by the poorly simulated long-term changes of cloud radiative effect. Our results reveal that the long-term cloud radiative effect simulation is critical for CMIP6 models in reproducing the PBLH long-term trends. This study highlights the importance of low cloud cover and soil moisture processes in modulating PBLH long-term variations and calls attentions to improve these processes in climate models in order to improve the PLBH long-term trend simulations.

How to cite: Yue, M., Wang, M., Guo, J., Zhang, H., Dong, X., and Liu, Y.: Long-term Trend Comparison of Planetary Boundary Layer Height in Observations and CMIP6 models over China, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1706, 2021.

EGU21-2523 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Do tropical islands warm or cool the troposphere?

David Leutwyler and Cathy Hohenegger

Tropical islands are commonly seen as hot spots that heat the troposphere, since during the day, they typically become warmer than the ocean. However, at the same time, they also become dryer (in terms of relative humidity), due to the soil's resistance to evaporate. The surface warm and dry anomaly is then propagated upwards into the troposphere by thunderstorms (deep convection) that frequently form over the islands. The vertical propagation of the anomaly happens because the warmer surface over land tends to push the induced diurnal convection towards a warmer moist adiabat. However, the drying of the land surface also pulls the clouds towards a colder moist adiabat, as more initial lifting along the dry adiabat is needed until saturation is reached. In other words, a dryer island leads to a more elevated cloud base, and thus, to convection at a colder moist adiabat. The formation of convective clouds over land results in a local density anomaly that is then communicated to the island's surroundings by gravity waves since the tropical atmosphere cannot sustain strong horizontal density gradients (WTG theory). Together these ideas allow formulating the hypothesis that surface temperature and humidity anomalies emerging over islands project onto the large-scale temperature profile of the troposphere. Who wins in influencing the troposphere, the surface warming or the drying? Or put differently, do islands heat or cool the troposphere?

 

We assess this hypothesis using a six-member ensemble of double-periodic convection-resolving Radiative-Convective Equilibrium (RCE) simulations (1006x1006x74 grid points), containing an archipelago of flat islands obtained from the Maritime Continent. In contrast to previous RCE simulations, the islands are represented by a land-surface scheme and are thus capable of representing not only the daytime anomaly in temperature but also that in relative humidity. We find that during episodes when precipitation occurs more frequently over land, the domain-mean (virtual) temperature in the mid-troposphere becomes colder. We also find that the drying (i.e, cooling) effect becomes pronounced for larger islands, and thus, removing a large island from the simulation also leads to a systematically colder domain-mean (virtual) temperature profile. The results suggest that islands may rather cool than warm the troposphere and that the inability of evaporation over land to keep up with the daytime surface warming is of key relevance for the temperature profile in the Maritime Continent.

How to cite: Leutwyler, D. and Hohenegger, C.: Do tropical islands warm or cool the troposphere?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2523, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2523, 2021.

The diurnal variations of surface and air temperature are related but their different responses to evaporative conditions can inform us about land-atmosphere interactions, extreme events, and their response to global change. Here, we evaluate the sensitivity of the diurnal ranges of surface (DTsR) and air (DTaR) temperature to evaporative fraction, across short vegetation, savanna, and forests at 106 Fluxnet observational sites and in the ERA5 global reanalysis. We show that the sensitivity of DTsR to evaporative fraction depends on vegetation type, whereas for DTaR it does not. Using FLUXNET data we found that on days with low evaporative fraction, DTsR is enhanced by up to 20 °C (30 °C in ERA5) in short vegetation, whereas only by 8 °C (10 °C in ERA5) in forests. Particularly, in short vegetation, ERA5 shows stronger responses, which is attributable to a negative bias on days with the high evaporative fraction. ERA5 also tends to have lower shortwave and longwave radiation input when compared to FLUXNET data. Contrary to DTsR, DTaR responds rather similarly to evaporative fraction irrespective of vegetation type (8 °C in FLUXNET, 10 °C in ERA5). To explain this, we show that the DTaR response to the evaporative fraction is compensated for differences in atmospheric boundary layer height by up to 2000 m, which is similar across vegetation types. We demonstrate this with a simple boundary layer heat storage calculation, indicating that DTaR is primarily shaped by changes in boundary layer heat storage whereas DTsR mainly responds to solar radiation, evaporation, and vegetation.  Our study reveals some systematic biases in ERA5 that need to be considered when using its temperature products for understanding land-atmosphere interactions or extreme events. To conclude, this study demonstrates the importance of vegetation and the dynamics of the atmospheric boundary layer in regulating diurnal variations in surface and air temperature under different evaporative conditions.

How to cite: Panwar, A. and Kleidon, A.: Evaluating the response of the diurnal range of surface and air temperature to evaporative conditions across vegetation types in ERA5 and FLUXNET data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2603, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2603, 2021.

EGU21-2940 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Application of the complete CORINE land covers for modelling in WRF model

Hajnalka Breuer, Zsuzsanna Zempléni, and Ákos Varga

Land use information is crucial in weather modelling as it determines the energy partitioning of the land surface. Based on the partitioning heating of near surface air and moisture supply of the planetary boundary layer is determined. These processes affect the general calculation of temperature, but it also has substantial effect on precipitation formation, especially on convective precipitation.

In this study the CORINE 44 categories are integrated into the WRF model. Usually the 44 land cover types are recategorized into a standard USGS or MODIS land use types. Here we present a dataset and application with the complete integration of the 44 types.

One-year runs are created with the CORINE land cover compared to the standard USGS dataset. Along with the new land cover types vegetation parameters had be defined as well. Four runs refer to a USGS-reference, CORINE2USGS converted, CORINE-USGS parameter, CORINE-newparameters where the effect of land cover and parameter change is analyzed. The modelled area covers the whole European region with 50 km resolution using the WRF 4.2 model. Regionally, on a monthly average 5-30% difference in precipitation and around 1 °C differences occur.

The research was supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office, Grant No. FK132014. Hajnalka Breuer's work was additionally financed by the János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

How to cite: Breuer, H., Zempléni, Z., and Varga, Á.: Application of the complete CORINE land covers for modelling in WRF model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2940, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2940, 2021.

EGU21-5011 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Impact of groundwater – soil moisture interaction on evolution of evapotranspiration and air temperature under climate change

Pedro Arboleda, Agnès Ducharne, and Frédérique Cheruy

Groundwater (GW) constitutes by far the largest volume of liquid freshwater on Earth. The most active part is soil moisture (SM), which plays a key role on land/atmosphere interactions. But GW is often stored in deep reservoirs below the soil as well, where it presents slow horizontal movements along hillslopes toward the river network. They end up forming baseflow with well-known buffering effects on streamflow variability, but they also contribute to sustain higher SM values, especially in the lowland areas surrounding streams, which are among the most frequent wetlands.  As a result, GW-SM interactions may influence the climate system, in the past but also in the future, with a potential to alleviate anthropogenic warming, at least regionally, owing to enhanced evapotranspiration rate (ET) or higher soil thermal inertia for instance.
To assess where, when, and how much GW-SM interaction affects the climate change trajectories, we use coupled land-atmosphere simulations with the IPSL-CM6 climate model, developed by the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace for CMIP6.  We contrast the results of two long-term simulations (1979-2100), which share the same sea surface temperature and radiative forcing, using the SSP5-8.5 scenario (i.e. the most pessimistic) for 2015-2100. The two simulations differ by their configuration of the land surface scheme ORCHIDEE: in the default version, there is no GW-SM interaction, while this interaction is permitted in the second simulation, within a so-called lowland fraction, fed by surface and GW runoff from the rest of the grid-cell. For simplicity, this lowland fraction is set constant over time, but varies across grid-cells based on a recently designed global scale wetland map. 
Within this framework, we analyse the impact of the GW-SM interaction on climate change trajectories, focusing on the response of evapotranspiration rates and near-surface air temperatures. The GW-SM interaction can modulate the response to climate change by amplifying, attenuating, or even inverting the climate change trend. Based on yearly mean values over land, we find that the GW-SM interaction amplifies the response of evapotranspiration to climate change, as the mean evapotranspiration rate increases 50% faster over 1980 - 2100 in the simulation with GW-SM interaction. In contrast, the mean warming over land is 1% weaker, shifting from 6.4 to 6.3 °C/100 years; thus attenuated, if the GW-SM interaction is accounted for. In both cases, these values hide important differences across climates and seasons, with mitigation or amplification for both variables, indicating the need for regional and seasonal assessment. We will also further explore how GW-SM interaction impacts the future evolution of heatwaves, in terms of duration and frequency. 

How to cite: Arboleda, P., Ducharne, A., and Cheruy, F.: Impact of groundwater – soil moisture interaction on evolution of evapotranspiration and air temperature under climate change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5011, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5011, 2021.

EGU21-2988 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Global hydro-meteorological anomalies associated with vegetation productivity extremes

Josephin Kroll, Jasper Denissen, Wantong Li, and René Orth

Vegetation productivity is generally governed by water and energy availability. In arid regions, it is usually water-controlled (i.e. soil moisture), whereas in humid regions it is mainly influenced by energy variables (i.e. incoming radiation). Shifts within or even between these regimes might result from hydro-meteorological extremes. For example, during droughts vegetation might become water-limited even in typically energy-controlled regions. In this context, the aim of our analysis is to detect the difference between the controls of average and extreme vegetation productivity.

For this purpose, we use global satellite-based Sun-Induced Chlorophyll Fluorescence (SIF) data as a proxy for vegetation productivity alongside several hydro-meteorological variables. We select the three largest positive and negative monthly SIF anomalies from 2007 – 2015 and determine the hydro-meteorological variable with the largest corresponding standardized anomaly, which is considered to represent the main driver of the respective vegetation extreme.

We aggregate the results across grid cells of similar climate conditions. By contrasting main controls and their importance on vegetation productivity during extreme and general conditions, we find that water control in arid regions and energy control in humid regions are overall consistent in both conditions, while the importance of deep root-zone soil moisture is significantly increased in arid regions. Then, we identify regions where transitions between water and energy-control occur and further assess to which extent such regime transitions amplify vegetation productivity anomalies and/or impact their recovery.

This study contributes to a better understanding of vegetation productivity extremes, which may change with changing future patterns of temperature and precipitation, with subsequent feedbacks on the climate system and implications on food security.

How to cite: Kroll, J., Denissen, J., Li, W., and Orth, R.: Global hydro-meteorological anomalies associated with vegetation productivity extremes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2988, 2021.

EGU21-3258 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Hottest drought temperature anomalies in sub-humid regions

Sungmin Oh, Ana Bastos, Markus Reichstein, Wantong Li, Jasper Denissen, Hanna Graefen, and Rene Orth

Droughts cause serious environmental and societal impacts, often aggravated by simultaneously occurring heat waves. Climate model projections suggest that droughts and high temperatures will further intensify over the next century. Thus, understanding the underlying mechanisms responsible for drought-induced heat is crucial to inform drought management strategies and to improve prediction of dry-hot extremes, especially under a changing climate. Using observation-based, global data over 2001-2015, we show hottest temperature anomalies during droughts in sub-humid and tree-dominated regions. This is mainly driven by a drought-related net radiation surplus and further amplified by forests’ water saving strategies that result in diminished evaporative cooling. By contrast, in semi-arid and short-vegetation regions, drought-related temperature increases are smaller. The reduction of evaporative cooling is weak and net radiation increases only marginally due to higher albedo over drought-stressed vegetation. As a result, our findings show the relative roles of climate and vegetation in shaping drought-heat extremes across space and highlight the importance of considering all interacting factors in understanding concurrent drought-heat extremes.

How to cite: Oh, S., Bastos, A., Reichstein, M., Li, W., Denissen, J., Graefen, H., and Orth, R.: Hottest drought temperature anomalies in sub-humid regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3258, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3258, 2021.

EGU21-4083 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Evaluating a land surface model at a water-limited site: implications for land surface contributions to droughts and heatwaves

Mengyuan Mu, Martin De Kauwe, Anna Ukkola, Andy Pitman, Teresa Gimeno, Belinda Medlyn, Dani Or, Jinyan Yang, and David Ellsworth

Land surface models underpin coupled climate model projections of droughts and heatwaves. However, the lack of simultaneous observations of individual components of evapotranspiration, concurrent with root-zone soil moisture, has limited previous model evaluations. Here, we use a comprehensive set of observations from a water-limited site in southeastern Australia including both evapotranspiration and soil moisture to a depth of 4.5 m to evaluate the Community Atmosphere-Biosphere Land Exchange (CABLE) land surface model. We demonstrate that alternative process representations within CABLE had the capacity to improve simulated evapotranspiration, but not necessarily soil moisture dynamics - highlighting problems of model evaluations against water fluxes alone. Our best simulation was achieved by resolving a soil evaporation bias; a more realistic initialisation of the groundwater aquifer state; higher vertical soil resolution informed by observed soil properties; and further calibrating soil hydraulic conductivity. Despite these improvements, the role of the empirical soil moisture stress function in influencing the simulated water fluxes remained important: using a site calibrated function reduced the soil water stress on plants by 36 % during drought and 23 % at other times. These changes in CABLE not only improve the seasonal cycle of evapotranspiration, but also affect the latent and sensible heat fluxes during droughts and heatwaves. The range of parameterisations tested led to differences of ~150 W m-2 in the simulated latent heat flux during a heatwave, implying a strong impact of parameterisations on the capacity for evaporative cooling and feedbacks to the boundary layer (when coupled). Overall, our results highlight the opportunity to advance the capability of land surface models to capture water cycle processes, particularly during meteorological extremes, when sufficient observations of both evapotranspiration fluxes and soil moisture profiles are available.

How to cite: Mu, M., De Kauwe, M., Ukkola, A., Pitman, A., Gimeno, T., Medlyn, B., Or, D., Yang, J., and Ellsworth, D.: Evaluating a land surface model at a water-limited site: implications for land surface contributions to droughts and heatwaves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4083, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4083, 2021.

EGU21-4099 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Varying horizontal resolution and land surface schemes in soil moisture – air temperature coupling, calculated with the WRF model for the MENA-CORDEX domain

Katiana Constantinidou, Panos Hadjinicolaou, George Zittis, and Jos Lelieveld

We study the effect of increased resolution and more elaborate representation of land surface on the soil moisture – air temperature coupling with the WRF climate downscaling model. Previous work indicated reduced winter/spring rainfall and enhanced summer heat. Two different land surface schemes (LSS) Noah and NoahMP with dynamic vegetation option turned on are incorporated in the WRF regional climate model in simulations at 50 and 16 km horizontal resolution over the region of Middle East and North Africa (MENA) for the period of 2000-2004. An analysis is performed for the summer season (June-July-August; JJA) for the four-year period, employing coupling metrics, i.e. associations between climatic variables related to the soil moisture – air temperature coupling. We calculate correlation coefficients between time-series consisting of 10-day averages, non-overlapping, for related surface climate variables from the WRF simulations and observational datasets. This assessment indicates that the NoahMP scheme simulates a stronger coupling than the Noah, irrespective of the resolution. The strength of this coupling varies at different areas around the MENA when considering mean or maximum 2-meter air temperature, with the NoahMP at 16-km producing the strongest effect over the western Asia part of the domain.

How to cite: Constantinidou, K., Hadjinicolaou, P., Zittis, G., and Lelieveld, J.: Varying horizontal resolution and land surface schemes in soil moisture – air temperature coupling, calculated with the WRF model for the MENA-CORDEX domain, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4099, 2021.

EGU21-4195 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Assessment of Impact of Hydroclimatic Disturbances on Terrestrial GPP Extremes of India Under Land Use and Climate Change

Abhishek Chakraborty, Sekhar Muddu, and Lakshminarayana Rao

Gross primary productivity (GPP) plays a vital role in the carbon storage potential of ecosystems. Climate change (CC), land use and cover change (LUCC), elevated CO2 concentrations (eCO2), and Nitrogen deposition (Ndep) are the main driving forces of GPP. Climate extremes are expected to negatively impact ecosystem carbon uptake (Du et al., 2018, Sci. Total Environ.). The knowledge of impacts of hydroclimatic disturbances (temperature, precipitation, soil moisture, drought, fire emission) on the GPP extremes is still limited for the Indian ecosystems. This study aims to quantify the GPP extremes and assess the drivers of these extremes across Indian ecosystems.

The study considers fourteen terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs). These TBMs are DLEM, ISAM, LPJ-wsl, ORCHIDEE-LSCE, BIOME-BGC, CLM4, CLM4VIC, CLASS-CTEM-N, GTEC, Sib3, SibCASA, TEM6, VISIT, and VEGAS2.1, which took part in the Multi-scale Synthesis and Terrestrial Model Intercomparison Project (MsTMIP). We consider these models' GPP ensemble values from 1981-2010 for four cases: CC, CC+LUCC, CC+LUCC+eCO2, and CC+LUCC+eCO2+Ndep. This multi-model ensemble approach predicts better estimates as it captures uncertainty better than a single model (Schwalm et al., 2015, Geophys. Res. Lett.). We also consider an observation-based model by Jung et al. (2011) along with these ensembles. We use a 3-D contiguous (Zscheischler et al., 2013, Ecol. Inform)   statistical approach to assess the spatiotemporal pattern of extreme GPPs in India and in its six meteorologically homogeneous regions. We also diagnose the size distribution and attribution of these negative extreme GPP events to each of these drivers individually and multiple drivers in a compounded way.

How to cite: Chakraborty, A., Muddu, S., and Rao, L.: Assessment of Impact of Hydroclimatic Disturbances on Terrestrial GPP Extremes of India Under Land Use and Climate Change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4195, 2021.

EGU21-4609 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Anomalies in vegetation activity in the early growing season determine the climate-vegetation coupling in Europe

Minchao Wu, Giulia Vico, Stefano Manzoni, Zhanzhang Cai, Maoya Bassiouni, Feng Tian, Jie Zhang, Kunhui Ye, and Gabriele Messori

Recent accelerating global warming with increasing climate variability exerts a strong impact on terrestrial carbon budgets, but the ecosystem response to the changing climate and the overall climate-vegetation coupling remain largely unclear during different stages of the growing season. The timing of growing seasons can be modulated by different environmental conditions (e.g., thermal and hydrological changes) and affect the overall interpretation of regional climate-vegetation coupling. Here, we analyse the climate-vegetation coupling for Europe during 1982–2014 using a grid-wise definition of the growing season period based on remote sensing data. We quantify sub-seasonal anomalies of vegetation greenness from long-term vegetation indices (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index and two-band Enhanced Vegetation Index), and their relationships with corresponding local growing conditions (2m temperature, downwards surface solar radiation and root-zone soil moisture); and with multiple climate variability indices that reflect the large-scale climatic conditions over Europe. We find that early growing season anomalies in vegetation greenness tend to be large during the first two months of the growing season and that the coupling of these anomalies with large-scale climate largely determines the full-year climate-vegetation coupling. The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and Scandinavian Pattern (SCA) phases evaluated one to two months before the start of growing season are the dominant drivers of the early growing season climate-vegetation coupling over large parts of boreal and temperate Europe. However, the sign of the effect of these indices on vegetation greenness is opposite. The East Atlantic Pattern (EA) evaluated several months in advance of the growing season is instead a main controlling factor on the temperate belt and the Mediterranean region. These findings highlight the importance of accounting for the spatial heterogeneity of growing season periods using location-specific definitions when studying large-scale land-atmosphere interactions.

How to cite: Wu, M., Vico, G., Manzoni, S., Cai, Z., Bassiouni, M., Tian, F., Zhang, J., Ye, K., and Messori, G.: Anomalies in vegetation activity in the early growing season determine the climate-vegetation coupling in Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4609, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4609, 2021.

EGU21-6376 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Global carbon and water exchange during drought reflects adaptation of rooting depth to climate and topography

Benjamin Stocker, Shersingh Tumber-Davila, Alexandra Konings, and Rob Jackson

The rooting zone water storage capacity (S) defines the total amount of water available to plants for transpiration during rain-free periods. Thereby, S determines the sensitivity of carbon and water exchanges between the land surface and the atmosphere, controls the sensitivity of ecosystem functioning to progressive drought conditions, and mediates feedbacks between soil moisture and near-surface air temperatures. While being a central quantity for water-carbon-climate coupling, S is inherently difficult to observe. Notwithstanding scarcity of observations, terrestrial biosphere and Earth system models rely on the specification of S either directly or indirectly through assuming plant rooting depth.

Here, we model S based on the assumption that plants size their rooting depth to maintain function under the expected maximum cumulative water deficit (CWD), occurring with a return period of 40 years (CWDX40), following Gao et al. (2014). CWDX40 is “translated” into a rooting depth by accounting for the soil texture. CWD is defined as the cumulative evapotranspiration (ET) minus precipitation, where ET is estimated based on thermal infrared remote sensing (ALEXI-ET), and precipitation is from WATCH-WFDEI, modified by accounting for snow accumulation and melt. In contrast to other satellite remote sensing-based ET products, ALEXI-ET makes no a priori assumption about S and, as our evaluation shows, exhibits no systematic bias with increasing CWD. It thus provides a robust observation of surface water loss and enables estimation of S with global coverage at 0.05° (~5 km) resolution.

Modelled S and its variations across biomes is largely consistent with observed rooting depth, provided as ecosystem-level maximum estimates by Schenk et al. (2002), and a recently compiled comprehensive plant-level dataset. In spite of the general agreement of modelled and observed rooting depth across large climatic gradients, comparisons between local observations and global model predictions are mired by a scale mismatch that is particularly relevant for plant rooting depth, for which the small-scale topographical setting and hydrological conditions, in particular the water table depth, pose strong controls.

To resolve this limitation, we investigate the sensitivity of photosynthesis (estimated by sun-induced fluorescence, SIF), and of the evaporative fraction (EF, defined as ET over net radiation) to CWD. By employing first principles for the constraint of rooting zone water availability on ET and photosynthesis, it can be derived how their sensitivity to the increasing CWD relates to S. We make use of this relationship to provide an alternative and independent estimate of S (SdSIF and SdEF), informed by Earth observation data, to which S, modelled using CWDX40, can be compared. Our comparison reveals a strong correlation (R2=0.54) and tight consistency in magnitude between the two approaches for estimating S. 

Our analysis suggests adaptation of plant structure to prevailing climatic conditions and drought regimes across the globe and at catchment scale and demonstrates its implications for land-atmosphere exchange. Our global high-resolution mapping of S reveals contrasts between plant growth forms (grasslands vs. forests) and a discrepant importance across the landscape of plants’ access to water stored at depth, and enables an observation-informed specification of S in global models.

How to cite: Stocker, B., Tumber-Davila, S., Konings, A., and Jackson, R.: Global carbon and water exchange during drought reflects adaptation of rooting depth to climate and topography, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6376, 2021.

EGU21-2754 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17 | Highlight

Nonlocal soil moisture effects during European heatwaves

Ronja Bohnenblust, Anna L. Merrifield, Sebastian Sippel, Isla R. Simpson, Karen A. McKinnon, Erich M. Fischer, Clara Deser, and Reto Knutti

It has been shown that European heatwaves can be significantly intensified by dry land surface conditions. While local temperature intensification through soil moisture feedbacks are well understood, the role of nonlocal soil moisture conditions has yet to be studied in more detail. Studies suggest that through modification of the atmospheric circulation, soil moisture conditions can enhance local temperatures and even evoke a remote temperature response. 

In this study, we analyze how nonlocal soil moisture – atmosphere feedbacks contribute to the development of high temperature extremes during a seasonally persistent European heatwave. We use a CESM-based global circulation model framework described in Merrifield et al. (2019), in which near-identical heatwave-inducing atmospheric circulation patterns encounter different land surface conditions. In one ensemble the whole atmosphere is constrained, allowing only local temperature intensification by the land surface. In the other ensemble only the upper atmosphere is constrained, enabling the land surface to modify the atmospheric circulation below 300hPa.

To understand what variables and processes contribute to regional heatwave intensification in some members and damping in others on a daily timescale, a refined spatio-temporal analysis of the data set was performed. We find that local daily temperature spread across ensemble members amounts to 5°C in the ensemble with unconstrained lower atmosphere, which is 4°C more than in the ensemble where the whole atmosphere is constrained, highlighting the importance of nonlocal land – atmosphere interactions. We identify atmospheric pathways through which the land surface state in one region affected the intensity of the heatwave in another region during the initiation, peak, and decay phases of the event. These heatwave intensification storylines may help to inform seasonal prediction and improve preparedness for future European heat events.

 

How to cite: Bohnenblust, R., Merrifield, A. L., Sippel, S., Simpson, I. R., McKinnon, K. A., Fischer, E. M., Deser, C., and Knutti, R.: Nonlocal soil moisture effects during European heatwaves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2754, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2754, 2021.

EGU21-7021 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Evaluation of soil moisture stress parameterizations in MEGAN model against MOFLUX field data and satellite observations of formaldehyde from OMI 

Beata Opacka, Trissevgeni Stavrakou, Jean-François Müller, Maite Bauwens, Diego Miralles, Akash Koppa, Biranna Pagán, and Alex B. Guenther

Biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) are emitted globally at about 1,100 Tg per year, with almost half of the share entailed by isoprene. Isoprene is highly reactive in the atmosphere, and its degradation impacts the atmospheric composition through the generation of ozone (in presence of NOx typical of polluted areas) and secondary organic aerosols, which both pose a risk to human health. Extreme weather conditions like heatwaves and droughts can substantially affect the emissions of isoprene in ways that are largely unknown. This limited knowledge is owed to the scarcity of isoprene flux measurements under drought stress conditions. The Missouri Ozarks AmeriFlux (MOFLUX) site is located in a high isoprene-emitting oak-hickory forested region with recurring drought occurrences. Until today, it is the only site with isoprene flux measurements that capture drought behaviour.

In this study, we use the state-of-the-art MEGAN biogenic emission model (Guenther et al., 2006; 2012) coupled with the canopy model MOHYCAN (Müller et al., 2008) to estimate isoprene emissions and evaluate two different parameterizations of the soil moisture stress factor (γSM): (a) the one used in MEGANv2.1, which consists of a simple dependence on soil water content and the permanent wilting point with inputs either from ERA-Interim or the GLEAMv3 reanalysis (Martens et al., 2017), and (b) the parameterization available in MEGANv3 (Jiang et al., 2018), which considers the physiological effects of drought stress on plant photosynthesis as defined in the Community Land Model (CLM4.5), which embeds the MEGAN model.  The effect of γSM on isoprene estimates is assessed against measurements of isoprene fluxes at the MOFLUX field site collected during the mild summer drought in 2011 (Potosnak et al., 2014) and the severe drought in 2012 (Seco et al., 2015). Based on the comparisons at the MOFLUX site, we perform an optimization of the empirical parameters of the MEGANv2.1 soil moisture stress parameterization. In addition, the parameterization is further evaluated using spaceborne formaldehyde (HCHO) columns observed by the OMI sounder. To this end, we perform multiyear simulations (2005-2016) of atmospheric composition with the IMAGES global chemistry-transport model (Müller et al., 2019) using isoprene emission datasets obtained for several variants of the parameterization. We evaluate the resulting HCHO column distributions and their interannual variability against OMI HCHO columns over drought-prone regions.

This work is conducted in the frame of the ALBERI project, funded by the Belgian Science Policy Office through the STEREO III programme.

How to cite: Opacka, B., Stavrakou, T., Müller, J.-F., Bauwens, M., Miralles, D., Koppa, A., Pagán, B., and Guenther, A. B.: Evaluation of soil moisture stress parameterizations in MEGAN model against MOFLUX field data and satellite observations of formaldehyde from OMI , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7021, 2021.

EGU21-7248 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Moisture recycling in five different regions with Mediterranean climates around the world

Jolanda Theeuwen, Obbe Tuinenburg, Arie Staal, Bert Hamelers, and Stefan Dekker

Weather extremes are predicted to be more intense and recurrent in the future because of climate change. Previous studies show that Mediterranean regions around the world are especially vulnerable to extreme events that depend on the hydrological cycle, such as droughts and floods. Land use and land cover changes may enhance these events, as they influence the exchange of moisture and energy between the land surface and atmosphere. To better understand the role of extremes in a future climate, we need to improve our understanding of the impact of climate change on the terrestrial hydrological cycle. Atmospheric transport of moisture is an important element of this cycle as it determines the allocation of evaporated moisture. We are especially interested in the sink-source relations. So, how land contributes to the moisture recycling over land further away, and the origin of the precipitation over, the so-called precipitation-shed. Tuinenburg et al. (2020) recently published a dataset with high-resolution global atmospheric moisture connections from evaporation to precipitation, allowing novel detailed insight. We used this dataset to study temporal variability in atmospheric moisture connections for five different regions with Mediterranean climates. We investigated the dependency of different Mediterranean regions on local and remote moisture sources, and how this dependency varies throughout the year. Large differences in the spatial pattern of moisture recycling over land showed to exist between the Mediterranean regions on the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. Additionally, of all regions, the Mediterranean Basin shows the largest temporal variability. This information is essential to study how local changes in land use and land cover have and will further affect the hydrological cycle in local and remote regions. This helps us to understand how climate extremes could change in the future as a result of land use and land cover changes.  

 

Tuinenburg, O. A., Theeuwen, J. J. E., and Staal, A. Global evaporation to precipitation flows obtained with Lagrangian atmospheric moisture tracking, PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.912710, 2020.

How to cite: Theeuwen, J., Tuinenburg, O., Staal, A., Hamelers, B., and Dekker, S.: Moisture recycling in five different regions with Mediterranean climates around the world, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7248, 2021.

EGU21-8406 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Study of the sensitivity of land-convection coupling in the European summer

Lisa Jach, Thomas Schwitalla, Kirsten Warrach-Sagi, and Volker Wulfmeyer

The state of the land surface can have a crucial influence on the triggering of convection. Investigations of the land-atmosphere coupling strength on the regional scale are still rare, and have been mainly performed using global climate models with coarse resolutions. Increasing the horizontal resolution and the concomitant improved representation of the land surface are expected to refine the representation of feedbacks. A strong limiting factor, especially for process-based studies of the link between surface moisture availability, land cover properties, and convection triggering, is the availability of data with sufficient vertical resolution and temporal coverage. A convenient metric to investigate this link is the ‘Convection Triggering Potential’-‘Low-Level Humidity Index’ framework, which is applied in this study. This process-based coupling metric examines the boundary layer structure based on temperature and humidity profiles to draw conclusions on the potential strength of interactions. However, increasing the resolution of a simulation usually aggravates the amount of storage capacity needed, and in practice the number of vertical levels written out is often decreased to a handful over the total column. Consequently, a comprehensive regional model intercomparison targeting land-convection coupling strength is challenging.

In this study, a perturbation approach was applied as an attempt to overcome this limitation. Differences in the choice and configuration of models cause a spread in mean and variance of atmospheric temperature and humidity between models that in turn may impact the outcome of the framework. Perturbation factors of different magnitudes were added to modify summer atmospheric temperature and humidity from a WRF simulation over the entire column on a daily basis. The simulation covered the period 1986-2015 over the EURO-CORDEX domain. The perturbations were chosen to approximate a potential model spread to some extent. Sensitivity in the coupling strength was assessed in relation to the unperturbed case by applying the framework to a range of perturbation cases with differently strong combinations of temperature and humidity changes.

We will present results 1) of how warmer, cooler, dryer or moister conditions in the atmosphere changed the frequency of summer days with high feedback potential, 2) how the different conditions influenced the occurrence of positive relative to negative feedbacks, and 3) of spatial differences in the sensitivity of the coupling strength to temperature or humidity modifications, respectively, over Europe.

How to cite: Jach, L., Schwitalla, T., Warrach-Sagi, K., and Wulfmeyer, V.: Study of the sensitivity of land-convection coupling in the European summer, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8406, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8406, 2021.

EGU21-8413 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

The response of land-atmosphere interactions and the atmospheric circulation across West Africa to intraseasonal variability

Joshua Talib, Christopher Taylor, Cornelia Klein, Bethan L. Harris, Seonaid R. Anderson, and Semeena V. Shamsudheen

Across West Africa rain-fed agriculture fulfils approximately 80% of the food needs of the population and employs 60% of the workforce. It is therefore critical to understand the effects of intraseasonal rainfall variability across West Africa. Previous work has shown that land-atmosphere interactions across West Africa can influence daily variability in deep convection characteristics and the impact of 10-25 day precipitation variability. Using earth observations and reanalyses, this study investigates the land surface response to 20-200 day precipitation variability and its impact on land-atmosphere interactions and the West African monsoon.

                Surprisingly, even though the sensitivity of the land surface across the Sahel to strong convection is short-lived (days) and daily precipitation patterns are strongly heterogeneous, a coherent regional-scale land surface response to 20-200 day precipitation variability is observed. This sensitivity of the land surface affects land-atmosphere interactions on a regional scale and perturbs the West African monsoon circulation. For example, during sub-seasonal periods of low rainfall, soil moisture significantly decreases across the Sahel and land surface temperatures increase by up to 2°C. Surface drying and warming across the Sahel is associated with an intensified heat low and a northward shift of low-level monsoon westerlies. During periods of high rainfall, the surface moistens and cools, which is associated with a high pressure tendency across the Sahel. This high pressure tendency dampens the heat low circulation across West Africa and reduces regional moisture fluxes. We show that the land surface response to 20-200 day rainfall variability across West Africa can have a significant impact on the monsoon circulation. This suggests that improving the representation of land-surface processes across West Africa has the potential to improve sub-seasonal forecast predictability and enhance early warning systems.

How to cite: Talib, J., Taylor, C., Klein, C., L. Harris, B., R. Anderson, S., and V. Shamsudheen, S.: The response of land-atmosphere interactions and the atmospheric circulation across West Africa to intraseasonal variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8413, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8413, 2021.

EGU21-9248 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Estimating root zone storage capacity from flux measurements

Francesco Giardina, Pierre Gentine, Alexandra G. Konings, and Benjamin D. Stocker

Terrestrial evapotranspiration (ET) is a key factor in the global energy and water cycles. It is constrained by the transport of moisture from the soil and from vegetation to the atmosphere. The water storage capacity in the root zone (Sr) is an important parameter in land-atmosphere water exchanges, defining how long vegetation is able to transpire during drought. However, Sr is hard to measure directly, being associated with the depth of plant roots actively involved in water uptake and the potential of tap roots accessing deep water and enabling sustained transpiration during drought.

 

In this study, we present a method to estimate Sr from flux measurements, based on a deep neural network approach trained on eddy covariance (EC) data, multiple soil moisture datasets and a remotely sensed index of vegetation greenness. We derive a soil moisture stress function (fET) that isolates the control of soil moisture on ET. We then use EC data to estimate Sr by investigating how it relates to the climatology of the maximum cumulative water deficit (CWD, defined as the cumulative difference between actual ET and precipitation) experienced by the vegetation across different sites. We hypothesize that plants exposed to high CWD develop higher Sr (acclimation to water stress) and that maximum CWD is thus a good estimator of Sr. To identify root zone water storage from flux measurements, we regress the output of fET against CWD and estimate the maximum CWD for stress by calculating the intersection of the regression line with the x-axis. The apparent sensitivity of fET to CWD and its correlation with the maximum CWD across sites are indicative of adaptation to the prevailing climate and drought regime.

 

We find that for many sites, particularly in seasonally dry climates, fET does not exhibit a continuous decline with increasing CWD, but follows a step-change and levelling off. That is, at the high end of the CWD spectrum, fET no longer appears sensitive to further increases in CWD. This suggests that plants may have access to deep water reservoirs during the unfolding of a drought event, indicating that plant access to water becomes decoupled from water use.

 

This study highlights the need to investigate the representation of plant access to deep water reservoirs during drought in terrestrial ecosystem models. These findings could improve our understanding of land-climate interactions, particularly under water-limited conditions.

How to cite: Giardina, F., Gentine, P., Konings, A. G., and Stocker, B. D.: Estimating root zone storage capacity from flux measurements, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9248, 2021.

EGU21-9740 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

What’s the impact of improved soil representations in the ECMWF land surface model and how does it affect the extremes?

Souhail Boussetta, Gabriele Arduini, Gianpaolo Balsamo, Emanuel Dutra, Anna Agusti-Panareda, Ervin Zoster, and David Stevens

With increasingly higher spatial resolution and a broader applications, the importance of soil representation (e.g. soil depth, vertical discretisation, vegetation rooting) within land surface models is enhanced. Those modelling choices actually affects the way land surfaces store and regulate water, energy and also carbon fluxes. Heat and water vapour fluxes towards the atmosphere and deeper soil, exhibit variations spanning a range of time scales from minutes to months in the coupled land-atmosphere system. This is further modulated by the vertical roots' distribution, and soil moisture stress function, which control evapotranspiration under soil moisture stress conditions. Currently in the ECMWF land Surface Scheme the soil column is represented by a fixed 4 layers configuration with a total of approximately 3m depth.

In the present study we explore new configurations with increased soil depth (up to 8m) and higher vertical discretisation (up to 10 layers) including a dissociation between the treatment of water and heat fluxes. Associated with the soil vertical resolution, the vertical distribution of roots is also investigated. A new scheme that assumes a uniform root distribution with an associated maximum rooting depth is explored. The impact of these new configurations is assessed through surface offline simulations driven by the ERA5 meteorological forcing against in-situ and global products of energy, water and carbon fluxes with a particular focus on the diurnal cycle and extreme events in recent years.

How to cite: Boussetta, S., Arduini, G., Balsamo, G., Dutra, E., Agusti-Panareda, A., Zoster, E., and Stevens, D.: What’s the impact of improved soil representations in the ECMWF land surface model and how does it affect the extremes?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9740, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9740, 2021.

EGU21-10351 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Surface air–soil temperature relationship and shallow soil thermal regime: a case study using a soil temperature observational dataset for Spain.

Camilo Melo Aguilar, Fidel González Rouco, Norman Steinert, Elena García Bustamante, Felix García Pereira, Hugo Beltrami, Francisco Cuesta Valero, and Almudena García García

The land-atmosphere interactions via the energy and water exchanges at the ground surface generally translate into a strong connection between the surface air temperature (SAT) and the ground surface temperature (GST). In turn, the surface temperature affects the amount of heat flowing into the soil, thus controlling the subsurface temperature profile. As soil temperature (ST) is a key environmental variable that controls various physical, biological and chemical processes, understanding the relationship between SAT and GST and STs is important.

In situ ST measurements represent the most adequate source of information to evaluate the distribution of temperature in soils and to address its influence on soil biological and chemical processes as well as on climate feedbacks. However, ST observations are scarce both in space and time. Therefore, the development of ST observational datasets is of great interest to promote analyses regarding the soil thermodynamics and the response to atmospheric warming.

We have developed a quality-controlled dataset of Soil Temperature Observations for Spain (SoTOS). The ST data are obtained from the Spanish meteorological agency (AEMET), including ST at different layers down to a depth of 1 m (i.e., 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5 and 1 m depth) for 39 observatories for the 1985–2018 period. Likewise, 2m air temperature has also been included for the same 39 sites.

SoTOS is employed to evaluate the shallow subsurface thermal regime and the SAT–GST relationship on interannual to multidecadal timescales. The results show that thermal conduction is the main heat transfer mechanism that controls the distribution of soil temperatures in the shallow subsurface. Regarding the SAT-GST relationship, there is a strong connection between SAT and GST. However, the SAT–GST coupling may be disrupted on seasonal to multidecadal timescales due to variations in the surface energy balance in response to decreasing soil moisture conditions over the last decade at some SoTOS sites. This results in larger GST warming relative to SAT. Such a response may have implications for climate studies that assume a strong connection between SAT and GST such as air temperature estimations from remote sensing products or even for palaeoclimatic analyses.

How to cite: Melo Aguilar, C., González Rouco, F., Steinert, N., García Bustamante, E., García Pereira, F., Beltrami, H., Cuesta Valero, F., and García García, A.: Surface air–soil temperature relationship and shallow soil thermal regime: a case study using a soil temperature observational dataset for Spain., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10351, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10351, 2021.

EGU21-10379 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

An assessment of the subsurface thermal diffusion regime at some sites in the Sierra de Guadarrama 

Félix García Pereira, Jesús Fidel González Rouco, Camilo Melo Aguilar, Thomas Schmid, Cristina Vegas Cañas, and Norman Steinert

An analysis of the subsurface thermal structure of Sierra de Guadarrama, in central Spain, is provided. The question addressed herein is how the temperature perturbations at the land-atmosphere interface propagate into the subsoil and change with depth. To respond, we analyse subsoil temperature data coming from four monitoring stations belonging to Guadarrama Monitoring Network (GuMNet; https://www.ucm.es/gumnet/), which cover a vertical slope ranging from 900 to 2200 m.a.s.l and a depth profile from ground surface down to 20 m. Time series span from 2015 to 2020, with some missing periods. Thermal diffusivity values are estimated from them under the assumption of heat downward propagation according to the one-dimensional heat conduction model solution, by considering the annual cycle attenuation and phase shift with depth. In addition, the aforementioned estimation is also accomplished from adjusting amplitude attenuation curves between temperature spectra at different depths to the theoretical spectral attenuation solution for one-dimensional heat conduction, which is a negative exponential function of frequency.

Preliminary results show that thermal diffusivity increases with depth at every site. Major changes take place in the soil-bedrock transition, which is found between 5-8 m deep, depending on the site. Some material samples extracted show that bedrock consists mainly of gneiss at three sites, and granite at the other one. Mean values calculated through the whole profiles lie within 1-1.4 10-6 m2/s, which are in the range of diffusivity coefficients of gneiss and granite.

How to cite: García Pereira, F., González Rouco, J. F., Melo Aguilar, C., Schmid, T., Vegas Cañas, C., and Steinert, N.: An assessment of the subsurface thermal diffusion regime at some sites in the Sierra de Guadarrama , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10379, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10379, 2021.

EGU21-10404 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Summer Heatwaves in Present and Future Climate simulated with global models participating in CMIP6

Yanfeng Zhao and Frederique Cheruy

Heat waves lead to major impacts on human health, food production and ecosystems, and are projected to increase with climate change. This study evaluates global climate models participating in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6) for their performance in simulating the present climate characteristics of summer heat waves. The analysis exploits the available global datasets (reanalyses, satellite products, gridded in-situ observations) to assess the realism of variables impacting the energy and water balance at the surface during heatwave events.The role of the underlying processes affecting the occurrence and intensity of the heat waves characteristics in present and future climate is also investigated based on the multi-model analysis.  A sensitivity study performed with the coupled atmospheric and land-surface modules of the IPSL climate model helps to support the multi-model analysis. A robust impact of the soil moisture on the dispersion of the heat-wave characteristics is diagnosed.  For 2 models it is possible to analyse the moist heat waves whose intensity and frequency is dramatically increased with respect to the dry heat waves at the end of the 21th century.

How to cite: Zhao, Y. and Cheruy, F.: Summer Heatwaves in Present and Future Climate simulated with global models participating in CMIP6, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10404, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10404, 2021.

EGU21-12213 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Irrigation in JULES Land-Only Simulations over South and East Asia

Markus Todt, Pier Luigi Vidale, Patrick C. McGuire, and Omar V. Müller

Capturing soil moisture-atmosphere feedbacks in a weather or climate model requires realistic simulation of various land surface processes. However, irrigation and other water management methods are still missing in most global climate models today, despite irrigated agriculture being the dominant land use in parts of Asia. In this study, we test the irrigation scheme available in the land model JULES (Joint UK Land Environment Simulator) by running land-only simulations over South and East Asia driven by WFDEI (WATCH Forcing Data ERA-Interim) forcing data. Irrigation in JULES is applied on a daily basis by replenishing soil moisture in the upper soil layers to field capacity, and we use a version of the irrigation scheme that extracts water for irrigation from groundwater and rivers, which physically limits the amount of irrigation that can be applied. We prescribe irrigation for C3 grasses in order to simulate the effects of agriculture, albeit retaining the simpler, widely used 5-PFT (plant functional type) configuration in JULES. Irrigation generally increases soil moisture and evapotranspiration, which results in increasing latent heat fluxes and decreasing sensible heat fluxes. Comparison with combined observational/machine-learning products for turbulent fluxes shows that while irrigation can reduce biases, other biases in JULES, unrelated to irrigation, are larger than improvements due to the inclusion of irrigation. Irrigation also affects water fluxes within the soil, e.g. runoff and drainage into the groundwater level, as well as soil moisture outside of the irrigation season. We find that the irrigation scheme, at least in the uncoupled land-atmosphere setting, can rapidly deplete groundwater to the point that river flow becomes the main source of irrigation (over the North China Plain and the Indus region) and can have the counterintuitive effect of decreasing annual average soil moisture (over the Ganges plain). Subsequently, we will explore the impact of irrigation on regional climate by conducting coupled land-atmosphere simulations.

How to cite: Todt, M., Vidale, P. L., McGuire, P. C., and Müller, O. V.: Irrigation in JULES Land-Only Simulations over South and East Asia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12213, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12213, 2021.

EGU21-13059 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Seasonal and episodic influence of local meteorology on fine particulate matter at a regional background site in North East India.

Adnan Qadri, Shahadev Rabha, Binoy Saikia, and Tarun Gupta

Climatological parameters like wind speed, temperature, boundary layer height facilitate in dispersion and accumulation of aerosols. Stagnant condition of atmosphere promote accumulation while the pollutants are more likely to get dispersed when non stagnation conditions exist. Sparse studies exist to assess the seasonal and episodic impact of stagnant weather conditions on enhancing aerosol formation in the North-East region of India.PM2.5 sampling was carried from January to November 2019 at a regional background site in Jorhat,Assam. Meteorological variables like wind speed, surface ambient temperature and relative humidity were obtained at one-minute resolution from a collocated air weather sensor. Ventilation coefficient was calculated from wind speed and Boundary Layer Height (BLH) ( from ERA5 reanalysis dataset)

Episodic days were identified as those exceeding permissible values of PM2.5 (National Ambient Air Quality Standards) i.e, 60µg/m3. Average wind speed on polluted and non-polluted days was 0.58±0.08 and 0.77 ± 0.17 m/s respectively. The average BLH was lower for the polluted days (243±73) than the non-polluted days (316±79). Pearson corelation coefficient of PM2.5 and wind speeds on polluted days was low (-0.23) compared to the non-polluted days (-0.54).

Wind rose plots reveal a seasonality trend with winter and summer winds being mostly between North East and South South-West while in monsoon and autumn it lies predominantly between SSW and South South-East (from the Bay of Bengal).  The Pearson correlation coefficients between PM2.5 and wind speeds are -0.66, -0.54 and -0.52 (all p <0.01) in winter, summer and autumn, respectively.Low average BLH persists in Winter and autumn . The seasonal maxima of BLH during winter, summer, monsoon and autumn was 847±167m, 932 ± 271m, 871 ±275m and 814 ± 256m, respectively.  Low night-time BLH (≈ 50m) in winter and autumn contributes to higher aerosol loading. The ventilation coefficient reaches its maxima during daytime around noon with summer season having the maximum daytime VC. High VC (≈270m2/s) in summer and monsoon  signify the seasonal effect on the pollutant dispersion and consequent high PM2.5 loading. Statistically significant negative correlations were obtained between PM2.5 and VC in winter and autumn seasons (-0.75 and -0.43).

Wind speeds have a strong correlation with PM2.5 except for the monsoon season and play a major role in aerosol dispersion.During monsoon, weak dependence of PM2.5 with wind speed and ventilation coefficient suggest significance of precipitation  which cause sscavenging of aerosols. Low correlations exist in summer for PM2.5 and VC due to possible interference due to regional transport of aerosols. 5-day backward trajectory analysis suggest  transport of air masses across the Thar desert and Indo Gangetic Plains to the site during the March(summer) suggesting transport of dust across the region.

How to cite: Qadri, A., Rabha, S., Saikia, B., and Gupta, T.: Seasonal and episodic influence of local meteorology on fine particulate matter at a regional background site in North East India., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13059, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13059, 2021.

EGU21-13286 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Interannual Variability in Arctic Surface Energy Fluxes and their Drivers

Raleigh Grysko, Jacqueline Oehri, and Gabriela Schaepman-Strub

The Arctic is undergoing amplified climate warming, and temperature and precipitation are predicted to increase even more in the future. Increased climate warming is indicative of changes in the surface energy budget, which lies at the heart of the carbon and water budget. The surface energy budget is an important driver of many earth system processes, and yet has received little attention in the past.

The goal of this study is to further develop our understanding in the spatio-temporal variability of Arctic surface energy fluxes. Specifically, we will investigate the magnitude and dependence on changes in energy flux drivers interannually at different sites across the Arctic. We used in situ data from 10 sites gathered from the FLUXNET2015, Arctic Observatory Network, and European Fluxes Database Center repositories. All study sites are of 60° N or higher and spread across the Arctic. The chosen sites include Chokurdakh, Russia (147.5° E, 70.8° N), Cherskiy, Russia (161.3° E, 68.6° N), Kaamanen,, Finland (27.3° E, 69.1° N), Imnavait Creek, USA (-149.3° E, 68.6° N), Zackenberg Heath, Greenland (-20.6° E, 74.5° N), Tiksi, Russia (128.9° E, 71.6° N), Sodankyla, Finland (26.6° E, 67.4° N), Poker Flat, USA (-147.5° E, 65.1° N), Nuuk, Greenland (-51.4° E, 64.1° N), and Samoylov, Russia (126.5° E, 72.4° N). Using these data, we analyzed the interannual variability of surface energy fluxes including net radiation, sensible, latent, and ground heat fluxes, and Bowen ratio including their dependence on potential drivers, such as temperature, wind speed, atmospheric stability, and vapor pressure deficit.

Our results on interannual variability in surface energy fluxes and flux drivers inform long term climate model simulations across the Arctic, which is critical for the improved prediction of the state and development of the surface energy budget and drivers under current and future conditions in this vulnerable, rapidly changing, and understudied region.

How to cite: Grysko, R., Oehri, J., and Schaepman-Strub, G.: Interannual Variability in Arctic Surface Energy Fluxes and their Drivers, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13286, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13286, 2021.

EGU21-14859 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Understanding differences in land-atmosphere interactions between pan-European convection-permitting and parametrised climate models

Kate Halladay, Segolene Berthou, and Elizabeth Kendon

Increasingly, we are using high-resolution convection-permitting models for climate projections but these models are less well understood in terms of the interaction between soil moisture, precipitation and evapotranspiration. The work was motivated by the discovery of warm, dry biases in summer in the 2.2 km convection-permitting model over France and eastern Europe compared to the 12 km convection-parametrised model that were associated with drier soils. We analyse several 12 km and 2.2 km versions of the Met Office Unified Model including sensitivity tests relating to soil hydraulics, land cover type and runoff model. We conduct similar tests using the land surface only to compare results between online and offline versions as the absence of some feedbacks can also produce differences.  

How to cite: Halladay, K., Berthou, S., and Kendon, E.: Understanding differences in land-atmosphere interactions between pan-European convection-permitting and parametrised climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14859, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14859, 2021.

EGU21-3166 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

Future trends in global water vs. energy-controlled evaporative regimes

Jasper Denissen, Adriaan Teuling, Wantong Li, Markus Reichstein, Andy Pitman, and Rene Orth

Water and energy availability govern the exchange of carbon, energy and water between the land surface and the atmosphere and therefore exert influence on near-surface weather. Roughly one can distinguish between two evaporative regimes: One limited by available energy (under wet conditions) and one limited by available soil moisture (under dry conditions). The transition between these evaporative regimes has been studied on local to global scales using observational and modelled datasets. This revealed the complexity of defining this transition, as it varies both in space and time and is sensitive to climate, soil and vegetation characteristics.

In this study, we characterized this transition by comparing the correlations of evaporation anomalies with (i) soil moisture anomalies (proxy for strength of water control) and (ii) temperature anomalies (proxy for strength of energy control). In the first step, we use observation-based data to derive global patterns of evaporative regimes and establish that the regime transition is sensitive to not only long-term average soil moisture, but also long-term average temperature. Analyzing historical and future climate model simulations from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6), we found that the ensemble mean of the CMIP6 models produces similar global patterns and sensitivities to energy and water availability. However, there is ample disagreement between results of individual models, with the largest spread around the transition zones. Further, the disagreement between individual models on the total area of water-limited regions increases gradually in time from historical to future experiments. In the next step, we attribute trends in evaporative regimes to trends in water and energy availability, CO2 and vapor pressure deficit. This research reveals how global climate change translates into regional-global scale trends in water- vs. energy-controlled evaporative regimes. Our observational results can constrain modelled global evaporative regimes and inform future model development to decrease the substantial spread across the present model ensemble.

How to cite: Denissen, J., Teuling, A., Li, W., Reichstein, M., Pitman, A., and Orth, R.: Future trends in global water vs. energy-controlled evaporative regimes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3166, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3166, 2021.

EGU21-15973 | vPICO presentations | CL4.17

An assessment of the impact of initial soil conditions on drought and precipitation extremes by using a high-resolution regional climate model

Juan José Rosa Cánovas, Matilde García-Valdecasas Ojeda, Patricio Yeste-Donaire, Emilio Romero-Jiménez, María Jesús Esteban-Parra, Sonia Raquel Gámiz-Fortis, and Yolanda Castro-Díez

Soil moisture (SM) is one of the fields with a relevant role in processes involving land-atmosphere interactions, especially in regions such as the Mediterranean Europe, where coupling between those components of the climate system is very strong. The aim of this study is to address the impact of initial soil conditions on drought and precipitation extremes over the Iberian Peninsula (IP). For this purpose, a dynamical downscalling experiment has been conducted by using the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) along the period 1990-2000. Two one-way nested domains has been considered: a finer domain spanning the IP, with spatial resolution around 10 km, nested within a coarser domain covering the Euro-CORDEX region at 50 km of spatial resolution.

WRF simulations have been driven with ERA-Interim reanalysis data for all fields except for SM. Initial SM conditions can be divided into three different types: wet, dry and very dry. Values corresponding to initial SM states have been calculated by combining the WRF soil texture map along with the Soil Moisture Index (SMI). For wet conditions, SMI = 1 has been assigned; for dry conditions, SMI = -0.5; and for very dry conditions, SMI = -1. For a grid point with a given texture class, field capacity, wilting point and SMI are used to obtain initial SM. Two different initial dates have been taken into account to also consider the effect of initializing at different moments in the year: 1990-01-01 00:00:00 UTC and 1990-07-01 00:00:00 UTC. Therefore, 6 experimental runs have been carried out (2 initial dates x 3 initial SM). Additionally, a control run full-driven with ERA-Interim has been conducted from 1982 to 2000 to be used as reference. In this context, the impact of initial conditions on different extreme precipitation indices (R5xDay, SDII and R10mm) and on the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) for drought has been addressed.

Results could help to better understand the relevance of land-atmosphere processes in climate modeling, particularly in assessing WRF sensitivity to variations in SM and its skill to detect drought and precipitation extremes. This information could be notably useful in those applications in which initial conditions are especially relevant, such as the seasonal-to-decadal climate prediction.

Keywords: soil moisture, initial conditions, precipitation extremes, drought, regional climate, Weather Research and Forecasting model

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: JJRC acknowledges the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities for the predoctoral fellowship (grant code: PRE2018-083921). This research has been carried out in the framework of the projects CGL2017-89836-R, funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness with additional FEDER funds, and B-RNM-336-UGR18, funded by FEDER / Junta de Andalucía - Ministry of Economy and Knowledge.

How to cite: Rosa Cánovas, J. J., García-Valdecasas Ojeda, M., Yeste-Donaire, P., Romero-Jiménez, E., Esteban-Parra, M. J., Gámiz-Fortis, S. R., and Castro-Díez, Y.: An assessment of the impact of initial soil conditions on drought and precipitation extremes by using a high-resolution regional climate model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15973, 2021.

CL4.18 – Earth radiation budget, radiative forcing and climate change

EGU21-1335 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18 | Highlight

Global-scale changes in Earth’s energy budget and implications for the water cycle

Richard Allan and Chunlei Liu

The climate system is heating up, causing warming at the surface and changes in the global water cycle. Updated reconstructions of Earth’s energy budget since the 1980s are presented and show how heat uptake is unevenly distributed across the northern and southern hemisphere. Heating is closely associated with ocean heat content changes and sea level rise while surface warming depends on partitioning between the upper mixed layer and deeper levels, leading to decadal variability. CMIP6 simulations are used to illustrate how global precipitation and evaporation are constrained by the Earth's energy balance to increase at ∼2–3%/°C and how this rate of increase is suppressed by rapid atmospheric adjustments in response to greenhouse gases and absorbing aerosols that directly alter the atmospheric energy budget. Rapid adjustments to forcings, cooling effects from scattering aerosol, and observational uncertainty can explain why observed global precipitation responses are currently difficult to detect but are expected to emerge and accelerate as warming increases and aerosol forcing diminishes.

How to cite: Allan, R. and Liu, C.: Global-scale changes in Earth’s energy budget and implications for the water cycle, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1335, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1335, 2021.

Clouds exert important effects on Earth's surface energy balance through their effects on longwave (LW) and shortwave (SW) radiation. Indeed, clouds radiatively warm the surface in the LW domain by emitting LW radiation back to the ground. The surface LW cloud radiative effect (CRE) quantifies this warming effect. To study the impact of clouds on the interanual natural climate variability, we need to observe them on a long time scale over all kinds of surfaces. The CALIPSO space lidar provides these observations by sampling the atmosphere along its track over all kinds of surfaces for over than 14 years (2006-2020).

In this work, we propose new estimates of the surface LW CRE from space-based lidar observations only. Indeed, we show from 1D atmospheric column radiative transfer calculations, that surface LW CRE at sea level linearly decreases with the cloud altitude. Thus, these computations allow to establish simple relationships between the surface LW CRE, and five cloud properties observed by the CALIPSO space lidar: the opaque cloud cover and altitude, the thin cloud cover, altitude, and emissivity. Over the 2008–2011, CALIPSO-based retrieval (27.7 W m-2) is 1.2 W m-2 larger than the one derived from combined space radar, lidar, and radiometer observations. Over the 2008–2018 period, the global mean CALIPSO-based retrieval (27.5 W m-2) is 0.1 W m-2 larger than the one derived from CERES space radiometer. Our estimates show that globally, opaque clouds warm the surface by 23.3 W m-2 and thin clouds contribute only by 4.2 W m-2. At high latitudes North and South over oceans, the largest surface LW opaque CRE occurs in fall (40.4 W m-2, 31.6 W m-2) due to the formation of additional opaque low clouds after sea ice melting over a warmer ocean.

To quantify the cloud property that drives the temporal variations of the surface LW CRE, the surface LW CRE needs to be related by simple relationships to a finite number of cloud properties such as cloud opacity, cloud altitude and cloud cover. This study allows a decomposition and attribution approach of the surface LW CRE variations and shows that they are driven by the variations occurring in the opaque cloud properties. Moreover, opaque cloud cover drives over than 73% of global surface LW CRE interannual variations.

How to cite: Arouf, A.: The Surface Longwave Cloud Radiative Effect from Space Lidar Observations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2064, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2064, 2021.

Relatively few studies have taken observationally driven approaches toward understanding the impact that atmospheric gases and temperatures have on surface downwelling longwave irradiance (SDLI) changes. This is despite the fact that changes in SDLI contribute significantly to climate change. Using reanalysis, observations, and the Rapid Radiative Transfer Model Global (RRTMG; Mlawer et al. 1997; Iacono et al. 2008), we linearly separate the contributions to SDLI changes from 1984 through 2017 caused by the following variables: atmospheric temperature, H2O, CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC-11, and CFC-12. The results show that spatial and temporal variations in SDLI are primarily caused by spatial and temporal variations in atmospheric temperatures and water vapor amounts. Specifically, we find that atmospheric temperatures and water vapor amounts contribute about 10 times more to SDLI variations from 1984 through 2017 than the remaining greenhouse gases. Climatologically, spatial variability in atmospheric temperature and water vapor also play a role in determining the impact on SDLI of CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC-11, and CFC-12. SDLI trends directly attributable to CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC-11, and CFC-12 are strongest over regions with climatologically high temperatures and low water vapor amounts. In other words, the impact of the greenhouse gases varies in space, with its strength depending on the background temperature and moisture fields, even if the change in gas mixing ratio is spatially uniform. Finally, CO2 contributed 10 times more to the SDLI trends of 0.05-0.30 W m-2 / decade (depending on location) from 1984 through 2017 than any other greenhouse gas.

 

References

How to cite: Clark, J.: Drivers of Surface Downwelling Longwave Irradiance Changes from 1984 through 2017, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8533, 2021.

EGU21-15200 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Disentangeling the shortwave surface energy balance in earth system models

Kine Onsum Moseid

The Earth’s surface energy balance is heavily affected by incoming solar radiation and how it propagates through our atmosphere. How the sunlight propagates towards the surface depends on the atmospheric presence of aerosols, gases, and clouds. 

Surface temperature evolution according to earth system models (ESMs) in the historical experiment from the coupled model intercomparison project phase 6 (CMIP6) suggests that models may be overly sensitive to aerosol forcing. Other studies have found that ESMs do not recreate observed decadal patterns in surface shortwave radiation - suggesting the models inaccurately underestimate the shortwave impact of atmospheric aerosols. These contradictory results act as a basis for our study.
Our study decomposes what determines both all sky and clear sky downwelling shortwave radiation at the surface in ESMs, using different experiments of CMIP6. We try to determine the respective role of aerosols, clouds and gases in the shortwave energy balance at the surface, and assess the effect of seasonality and regional differences.

How to cite: Moseid, K. O.: Disentangeling the shortwave surface energy balance in earth system models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15200, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15200, 2021.

EGU21-3798 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Internal variability and unforced trends of all-sky and clear-sky SSR: quantitative estimates using CMIP6

Boriana Chtirkova, Doris Folini, Lucas Ferreira Correa, and Martin Wild

Quantifying trends in surface solar radiation (SSR) of unforced simulations is of substantial importance when one tries to quantify the anthropogenic effect in forced trends, as the net effect may be dampened or amplified by the internal variability of the system. In our analysis, we consider trends on different temporal scales (10, 30, 50 and 100 years) from 58 global climate models, participating in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project - Phase 6 (CMIP6). We calculate the trends at the grid-box level for all-sky and clear-sky SSR using annual mean data of the multi-century pre-industrial control (piControl) experiments. The trends from both variables are found to depend strongly on the geographical region, as the most pronounced trends of the all-sky variable are observed in the Tropical Pacific, while the largest clear-sky trends are found in the large desert regions. Inspecting for each grid cell the statistical distribution of occurring N-year trends  shows that they are normally distributed in the majority of grid cells for both all-sky and clear-sky SSR. The 75-th percentile taken from these distributions (i.e. a positive trend with a 25 % chance of occurrence) varies with geographical region, taking values in the ranges 0.79 - 12.03 Wm-2/decade for 10-year trends, 0.15 - 2.05 Wm-2/decade for 30-year trends, 0.07 - 0.92 Wm-2/decade for 50-year trends and 0.02 - 0.29 Wm-2/decade for 100-year trends for all-sky SSR. The unforced trends become less significant on longer timescales – the trend medians, corresponding to the above ranges, are 3.18 Wm-2/decade, 0.62 Wm-2/decade, 0.29 Wm-2/decade, 0.10 Wm-2/decade respectively. The trends for clear-sky SSR are found to differ from the all-sky SSR by a factor of 0.16 on average, independent of the trend length. The model spread becomes greater at longer trend timescales, the differences being more substantial between large model families rather than between individual models. To elucidate the dominant causes of variability in different regions, we examine the correlations of the SSR variables with ambient aerosol optical thickness at 550 nm, atmosphere mass content of water vapour, cloud area fraction and albedo.

How to cite: Chtirkova, B., Folini, D., Ferreira Correa, L., and Wild, M.: Internal variability and unforced trends of all-sky and clear-sky SSR: quantitative estimates using CMIP6, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3798, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3798, 2021.

As solar energy share is showing a significant growth in the European electricity generation system, assessments regarding long-term variation of this variable related to climate change are becoming more and more relevant for this sector. Several studies analysed the impact of climate change on the solar energy sector in Europe (Jerez et al, 2015) finding light impact (-14%; +2%) in terms of mean surface solar radiation. The present study focuses on extreme values, namely on the distribution of low surface solar radiation (overcast situation) and high surface solar radiation (clear sky situation), since the frequencies of these situations have high impact on electricity generation.

The study considers 11 high-resolution (0.11 deg) bias-corrected climate projections from the EURO-CORDEX ensemble with 5 Global Climate Models (GCMs) downscaled by 6 Regional Climate Models (RCMs).

Changes in extreme surface solar radiation frequencies show different regional patterns over Europe.

The study also includes a case study determining the changes in solar power generation induced by the extreme situations.

 

 

Jerez et al (2015): The impact of climate change on photovoltaic power generation in Europe, Nature Communications 6(1):10014, 10.1038/ncomms10014

 

How to cite: Bartok, B.: Changes in extreme surface solar radiation in EURO-CORDEX Regional Climate Models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16536, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16536, 2021.

EGU21-6139 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Surface solar radiation trends under all-sky and clear-sky conditions over Europe

Lucas Ferreira Correa, Martin Wild, Doris Folini, and Boriana Chtirkova

Solar radiation is the primary source of energy for the climate system and a variety of biological processes on the planet. In that sense, understanding the radiative processes in the atmosphere and identifying the governing factors of these processes is key for climate diagnosis and prognosis. In this work, we use daily in-situ observations from 528 stations over Europe from the World Radiation Data Centre (WRDC) database, to analyze Surface Solar Radiation (SSR) trends from 1964 until 2018 in all regions of the continent. Statistical methods were applied to quality-control the dataset: detecting and removing outliers, homogenization and gap-filling of the time series. Two different statistical approaches for identification of clear-sky conditions were applied and compared. Observations in most of the regions on the European continent agree with previously observed negative trends (diming) until the 80’s, followed by positive SSR trends (brightening) from then on, continuing until recent years. However, the regime shifts and the intensity of the trends are not homogeneous within the continent, indicating that regional aspects have non-negligible impacts on the SSR behavior. The comparison between all-sky and clear-sky SSR observations helps to identify to what extent the clouds were a relevant factor in the observed trends in every part of the continent. With this type of analysis we intend to not only present the SSR trends over Europe, but also to expand the comprehension of their spatial heterogeneity across the continent, as well as their causes.

How to cite: Ferreira Correa, L., Wild, M., Folini, D., and Chtirkova, B.: Surface solar radiation trends under all-sky and clear-sky conditions over Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6139, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6139, 2021.

EGU21-5264 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Potential Driving Factors on Surface Solar Radiation Trends over China in Recent Years

Qiuyan Wang, Hua Zhang, and Martin Wild

The annual mean surface solar radiation (SSR) trends under all-sky, clear-sky, all-sky-no-aerosol, and clear-sky-no-aerosol conditions as well as their possible causes are analyzed during 2005-2018 over China based on different satellite-retrieved datasets to determine the likely drivers of the trends. The results confirm clouds and aerosols as the major contributors to such all-sky SSR trends over China but playing different roles over sub-regions. Aerosol variations during this period result in a widespread brightening, while cloud effects show opposite trends from south to north. Moreover, aerosols contribute more to the increasing all-sky SSR trends over northern China, while clouds dominate the SSR declines over southern China. A radiative transfer model is used to explore the relative contributions of cloud cover from different cloud types to the all-types-of-cloud-cover-induced (ACC-induced) SSR trends during this period in four typical sub-regions over China. The simulations point out that the decreases in low-cloud-cover (LCC) over the North China Plain are the largest positive contributor of all cloud types to the marked annual and seasonal ACC-induced SSR increases, and the positive contributions from both high-cloud-cover (HCC) and LCC declines in summer and winter greatly contribute to the ACC-induced SSR increases over East China. The contributions from medium-low-cloud-cover (mid-LCC) and LCC variations dominate the ACC-caused SSR trends over southwestern and South China all year round, except for the larger HCC contribution in summer.

How to cite: Wang, Q., Zhang, H., and Wild, M.: Potential Driving Factors on Surface Solar Radiation Trends over China in Recent Years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5264, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5264, 2021.

EGU21-8167 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Global and Regional Satellite-based Surface Solar Radiation data sets provided by the CM SAF

Jörg Trentmann, Uwe Pfeifroth, Jaqueline Drücke, and Roswitha Cremer

The incoming surface solar radiation has been defined as an essential climate variable by GCOS. Long term monitoring of this part of the earth’s energy budget is required to gain insights on the state and variability of the climate system. In addition, climate data sets of surface solar radiation have received increased attention over the recent years as an important source of information for solar energy assessments, for crop modeling, and for the validation of climate and weather models.

The EUMETSAT Satellite Application Facility on Climate Monitoring (CM SAF) is deriving climate data records (CDRs) from geostationary and polar-orbiting satellite instruments. Within the CM SAF these CDRs are accompanied by operational data at a short time latency to be used for climate monitoring. All data from the CM SAF are freely available via www.cmsaf.eu.

Here we present the regional and global climate data records of surface solar radiation from the CM SAF. The regional SARAH-2.1 climate data record (Surface Solar Radiation Dataset – Heliosat, doi: 10.5676/EUM_SAF_CM/SARAH/V002_01) is based on observations from the series of Meteosat satellites. SARAH-2.1 provides high resolution data (temporal and spatial) of the surface solar radiation (global and direct) and the sunshine duration from 1983 to 2017 for the full view of the Meteosat satellite (i.e, Europe, Africa, parts of South America, and the Atlantic ocean). The global climate data record CLARA (CM SAF Clouds, Albedo and Radiation dataset from AVHRR data, doi: 10.5676/EUM_SAF_CM/CLARA_AVHRR/V002_01) is based on observations from the series of AVHRR instruments onboard polar-orbiting satellites. CLARA provides daily- and monthly-averaged global data of the solar irradiance (SIS) from January 1982 to June 2019 with a spatial resolution of 0.25°. In addition to the solar surface radiation, also the longwave surface radiation as well as surface albedo and numerous cloud properties are provided in CLARA. The high accuracy and stability of these data record allows the assessment of the spatial and temporal variability and trends as well as a number of other applications that require high-resolution surface irradiance data.

Both Thematic Climate Data Records (TCDR) are accompanied and temporally-extended by consistent data records, so-called Interim Climate Data Records (ICDR), which are provided with a latency of 5 days to support applications that require more recent surface irradiance data, e.g., operational climate monitoring.

In late 2021 / early 2022 new versions of both data records, SARAH and CLARA, will be provided by the CM SAF. The quality of these data records will be improved, e.g, by a better treatment of snow-covered surfaces, and temporally extended to cover the WMO climate reference period 1991 to 2020. Here, first results of the updated data records and their improvements will be presented.

How to cite: Trentmann, J., Pfeifroth, U., Drücke, J., and Cremer, R.: Global and Regional Satellite-based Surface Solar Radiation data sets provided by the CM SAF, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8167, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8167, 2021.

EGU21-3493 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Validation and comparison of incoming solar radiation satellite databases on the Atlantic coast of Central Africa. 

Amine Ouhechou, Nathalie Philippon, and Béatrice Morel

Solar radiation incident on the Earth's surface is important for the functioning of tropical forests, as it affects the availability of light and water. Due to the lack of in-situ data in tropical forest environments, satellite products and reanalyses are the only ways to estimate solar radiation on a regional scale. An intercomparison of five satellite databases including CERES-EBAF, CERES-SYN1deg, CMSAF-SARAH, CMSAF-CLARA, CAMS-JADE as well as the ERA5 reanalysis, is carried out for the Atlantic coast of Central Africa by evaluating them against two in-situ data sets: the monthly FAOCLIM2 database and original infra-daily data from meteorological stations set up within the framework of ecoclimatic projects. From this inter-comparison we show the differences between these six products and with in-situ data from monthly to daily scales. We also show that the Atlantic coast of Central Africa receives the least amount of solar radiation in all products compared to other regions of Central Africa.

How to cite: Ouhechou, A., Philippon, N., and Morel, B.: Validation and comparison of incoming solar radiation satellite databases on the Atlantic coast of Central Africa. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3493, 2021.

EGU21-16094 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

A Framework of Generating 10-m Spectral Surface Albedo Products from Sentinel-2 and MODIS data

Rui Song, Jan-Peter Muller, and Alistair Francis

Abstract: Surface albedo is a fundamental radiative parameter as it controls the Earth’s surface energy budget and directly affects the Earth’s climate. A new method is proposed of generating 10-m high-resolution spectral surface albedo from Sentinel-2 L1C top-of-atmosphere (TOA) reflectance and MODIS bi-directional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) data. This high-resolution spectral surface albedo generation system will be described and consists of 5 parts: 1) retrieval of Sentinel-2 spectral surface reflectance using the Sensor Invariant Atmospheric Correction (SIAC) algorithm; 2) generation of Sentinel-2 cloud mask using machine learning; 3) extraction of pure pixels and their corresponding abundance values from 20-m Sentinel-2 data using an Endmember Extraction Algorithm; 4) inversion of high-resolution albedo from MODIS_albedo/Sentinel2_BRF ratio matrix; and 5) downscaling retrieved 20-m spectral and broadband albedo to 10-m. The SIAC algorithm is developed by [1], and has demonstrated to vastly improve the accuracy of Sentinel-2 atmospheric correction when compared against the use of in situ AERONET data. The machine learning cloud detection approach CloudFCN [2] is based on a Fully Convolutional Network architecture, and has become a standard Deep Learning approach to image segmentation. The CloudFCN exhibits state-of-the-art performance in picking up cloud pixels which is comparable to other methods in terms of performance, high speed, and robustness to many different terrains and sensor types. The endmember extraction uses N-FINDR along with Automatic Target Generation Process to identify the pure pixels from Sentinel-2 spectral data. The extracted pure pixels are used to relate the albedo-to-reflectance matrix with the abundance values of different pure pixels. The high-resolution albedo values are finally retrieved by solving this over-parameterised matrix. This framework also produces a MODIS BRDF prior based on 20-years of MCD43A1 and VNP43A1 daily BRDF data. This BRDF prior is produced on a daily basis, and will be used to temporally interpolate the high-resolution albedo values over pixels that are covered by clouds. The produced high-resolution albedo data will be validated over different tower sites where long-time series of in situ albedo products have been produced [3].

Keywords: high-resolution, surface albedo, Sentinel-2, SIAC, machine learning, endmember

[1] Yin, F.; Lewis, P.E.; Gomez-Dans, J.; Wu, Q. A sensor-invariant atmospheric correction method: Application to Sentinel-2/MSI and Landsat 8/OLI. EarthArXiv, 21 Feb. 2019 web, doi:10.31223/osf.io/ps957.

[2] Francis, A.; Sidiropoulos, P.; Muller, J.-P. CloudFCN: Accurate and Robust Cloud Detection for Satellite Imagery with Deep Learning. Remote Sens. 2019, 11, 2312. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11192312.

[3] Song, R.; Muller, J.-P.; Kharbouche, S.; Yin, F.; Woodgate, W.; Kitchen, M.; Roland, M.; Arriga, N.; Meyer, W.; Koerber, G.; Bonal, D.; Burban, B.; Knohl, A.; Siebicke, L.; Buysse, P.; Loubet, B.; Leonardo, M.; Lerebourg, C.; Gobron, N. Validation of Space-Based Albedo Products from Upscaled Tower-Based Measurements Over Heterogeneous and Homogeneous Landscapes. Remote Sens. 2020, 12, 833. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12050833.

How to cite: Song, R., Muller, J.-P., and Francis, A.: A Framework of Generating 10-m Spectral Surface Albedo Products from Sentinel-2 and MODIS data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16094, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16094, 2021.

EGU21-7294 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Evaluation of clear sky models to estimate the surface direct aerosol radiative effect over Germany

Jonas Witthuhn, Anja Hünerbein, Hartwig Deneke, Florian Filipitsch, and Stefan Wacker

The radiation budget of the earth and its climate system is driven by the solar radiation, which interacts with gases, aerosol particles and clouds. Focusing on aerosol, a fundamental measure is the radiative forcing resulting from aerosol-radiation interactions (RFari) which is also known as the aerosol direct radiative effect. Quantifying the surface RFari on regional scales aids the understanding of the role of aerosol in the climate system and is important for the planning of solar energy systems.

This study is based on a one year dataset (2015) of shortwave broadband global and diffuse horizontal irradiance measured with shaded and unshaded pyranometers at 26 station across Germany within the German Weather Service (DWD) observational network. A variety of clear-sky models are utilized to quantify RFari with a clear sky fitting technique. Clear sky models used are MMAC, MRM v.6.1, METSTAT, ESRA, Heliosat-1, CEM and the simplified Solis model. As these models have not been designed to estimate the clear sky irradiance without the presence of aerosol, we evaluated the accuracy of RFari with an reference simulation.

The reference RFari is simulated using the TROPOS (Leibniz Institute of Tropospheric Research) Cloud and Aerosol Radiative Simulator (T-CARS) utilizing the offline version of the ECMWF radiation scheme (ecRad) with input data of meteorological state of the atmosphere, trace-gases and aerosol from CAMS reanalysis.

The clear sky fitting approach for this set of clear sky models agrees well with T-CARS, showing an RMSE of 6.7 Wm-2 and an correlation of 0.75. The annual mean of surface RFari over the observation stations in Germany shows a value of -13.2 Wm-2 as an average over all clear sky models, compared to -13.4 Wm-2 from T-CARS. Out of this set of clear sky models, best performance is shown by the ESRA and MRM v6.1 models. Although, the accuracy of the annual mean RFari from the clear sky fitting approach is strongly depended on the number available clear-sky irradiance measurements and its distribution over the year. Therefore, this approach is not recommended for climatological studies, but may serve as valuable information for e.g. the evaluation of power generation and the influence by aerosol of photo-voltaic power plants.

How to cite: Witthuhn, J., Hünerbein, A., Deneke, H., Filipitsch, F., and Wacker, S.: Evaluation of clear sky models to estimate the surface direct aerosol radiative effect over Germany, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7294, 2021.

EGU21-14549 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

COVID-19 Lockdown and its Effects on Aerosol Optical and Radiative Properties over Indo-Gangetic Plain

Sarla Yadav, Atul Kumar Srivastava, Ajit Ahlawat, and Sumit Kumar Mishra

Aerosol optical and radiative properties, measured with theground based sun-sky radiometer (under AERONET) were explored at Kanpur (26.5°N, 80.2°E) in the central and Gandhi College (Ballia) (25.8°N, 84.1°E) in the eastern Indo Gangetic Plain (IGP) innorthern India. The measurements were carried out during the period from January to July 2019 (non-lockdown) and 2020 (lockdown). Significant changes were observed in aerosol properties during the lockdown period due to COVID-19 pandemic.This year marked an overall reduction of 15.79% and 3.39% in aerosol optical depth (AOD) than year 2019 at Kanpur and Gandhi College, respectively. Lockdown phase1 (23rd March to 14th April, 2020) showed reduction of 52.52 % and 42.22% in AOD compared to pre-lockdown condition at Kanpur and Gandhi College, respectively. In addition to lockdown Phase 1 observations, an increasing trend in AOD values was found at both locations for subsequent lockdown phases. Higher values of angstrom exponent measured at Eastern region (1.13 ± 0.17) than central region (0.97 ± 0.26) indicating the dominance of fine particles at Gandhi College. During lockdown Phase-1, the values of atmospheric forcing and heating rate were decreased about 23.48% and 15.07% at Kanpur and Gandhi College,respectively compared to year 2019 values.There was overall 1.31% reduction in SSA at Kanpur while 4.34% reduction was observed at Gandhi college in year 2020 than 2019. Current year marked reduction in SSA by 1.56% at Gandhi College than Kanpur representing the absorbing particles due to biomass burning event during the lockdown period. The effects of lockdown were prominently seen for Kanpur region in terms of variations in aerosol properties. The resultant atmospheric forcing and heating rate shows 11.86% reduction at Kanpur while 35.27% increased at Gandhi College during the lockdown period in 2020 compared to 2019.As the lockdown progressed, increasing trend was observed in atmospheric forcing and heating rate.

How to cite: Yadav, S., Srivastava, A. K., Ahlawat, A., and Mishra, S. K.: COVID-19 Lockdown and its Effects on Aerosol Optical and Radiative Properties over Indo-Gangetic Plain, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14549, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14549, 2021.

EGU21-928 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Implication of the reduction in anthropogenic aerosols due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the future recovery scenarios for radiative forcing

Stephanie Fiedler, Klaus Wyser, Rogelj Joeri, and Twan van Noije

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to unprecedented reductions in socio-economic activities. Associated decreases in anthropogenic aerosol emissions are not represented in the original CMIP6 emission scenarios. Here we estimate the implications of the pandemic for the aerosol forcing in 2020 and quantify the spread in aerosol forcing associated with the differences in the post-pandemic recovery pathways. To this end, we use new emission scenarios taking the COVID-19 crisis into account and projecting different socio-economic developments until 2050 with fossil-fuel based and green pathways (Forster et al., 2020). We use the new emission data to generate input for the anthropogenic aerosol parameterization MACv2-SP for CMIP6 models. In this presentation, we first show the results for the anthropogenic aerosol optical depth and associated effects on clouds from the new MACv2-SP data for 2020 to 2050 (Fiedler et al., in review). We then use the MACv2-SP data to provide estimates of the effective radiative effects of the anthropogenic aerosols for 2020 and 2050. Our forcing estimates are based on new atmosphere-only simulations with the CMIP6 model EC-Earth3. The model uses MACv2-SP to represent aerosol-radiation and aerosol-cloud interactions including aerosol effects on cloud lifetime. For each anthropogenic aerosol pattern, we run EC-Earth3 simulations for fifty years to substantially reduce the impact of model-internal variability on the forcing estimate. Our results highlight: (1) a change of +0.04 Wm-2 in the global mean effective radiative forcing of anthropogenic aerosols for 2020 due to the pandemic, which is small compared to the magnitude of internal variability, (2) a spread of -0.38 to -0.68 Wm-2 for the effective radiative forcing associated with anthropogenic aerosols in 2050 depending on the recovery scenario in MACv2-SP, and (3) a more negative (stronger) anthropogenic aerosol forcing for a strong green than a moderate green development in 2050 due to higher ammonium emissions in a highly decarbonized society (Fiedler et al., in review). The new MACv2-SP data are now used in climate models participating in the model intercomparison project on the climate response to the COVID-19 crisis (Covid-MIP, Jones et al., in review, Lamboll et al., in review).

References:

Fiedler, S., Wyser, K., Joeri, R., and van Noije, T.: Radiative effects of reduced aerosol emissions during the COVID-19 pandemic and the future recovery, in review, [preprint] https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10504704.1.

Forster, P.M., Forster, H.I., Evans, M.J. et al.: Current and future global climate impacts resulting from COVID-19. Nat. Clim. Chang. 10, 913–919, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0883-0.

Jones. C., Hickman, J., Rumbold, S., et al.: The Climate Response to Emissions Reductions due to COVID-19, Geophy. Res. Lett., in review.

Lamboll, R. D., Jones, C. D., Skeie, R. B., Fiedler, S., Samset, B. H., Gillett, N. P., Rogelj, J., and Forster, P. M.: Modifying emission scenario projections to account for the effects of COVID-19: protocol for Covid-MIP, in review, [preprint] https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-2020-373.

How to cite: Fiedler, S., Wyser, K., Joeri, R., and van Noije, T.: Implication of the reduction in anthropogenic aerosols due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the future recovery scenarios for radiative forcing, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-928, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-928, 2021.

IPCC announced that the WGI contribution to AR6 will be dedicated to the memory of leading climate scientist Sir John Houghton. Sir John died of complications from COVID-19 one year ago. He helped creating the IPCC in 1988, and served as Chair and Co-Chair of WGI from 1988 to 2002. In this presentation we focus on two aspects of his work: radiation transfer and cloud radiative forcing. — His book “The Physics of Atmospheres” (third edition, 2002) says: “The equation of radiative transfer through the slab, which includes both absorption and emission, is sometimes known as Schwarzschild’s equation” (Eq. 2.3, p.11). Introducing a constant Ф net flux (Eq. 2.5) being equal to the outgoing radiation, the black-body function B of the atmosphere is given as a function of Ф and the optical depth as B = Ф(χ* + 1)/2π (Eq. 2.12). He says, “it is easy to show that there must be a temperature discontinuity at the lower boundary”: Bg – B0 = Ф/2π (Eq. 2.13). Fig. 2.4 displays the net flux at the boundary as half of the outgoing radiation, independently of the optical depth. He notes: “Such a steep lapse rate will soon be destroyed by the process of convection”, and continues: “Combining (2.12) and (2.13) we find Bg = Ф(χ* + 2)/2π ” (Eq. 2.15, section 2.5 The greenhouse effect). We controlled Eq. (2.13) on 20 years of clear-sky CERES EBAF Ed4.1 global mean data and found it satisfied with a difference of -2.28 Wm-2. The validity of this equation casts constraint on the surface net radiation and on the corresponding non-radiative fluxes in the hydrological cycle by connecting them unequivocally to half of the outgoing longwave radiation. We constructed the all-sky version of the equation by separating atmospheric radiation transfer from longwave cloud effect, and found it valid within 2.84 Wm-2. We computed Eq. (2.15) with a special optical depth of χ* = 2 for clear-sky; it is justified with a difference of -2.88 Wm-2. We also created its all-sky version; the difference is 2.46 Wm-2. Altogether, the four equations are satisfied on 20-yr of CERES data with a mean bias of 0.035 Wm-2. We show that the four equations together determine a clear-sky and an all-sky greenhouse factor as 1/3 and 0.4. Data from Wild et al. (2018) and IPCC AR5 (2013) show g(clear) = (398 – 267)/398 = 0.33 and g(all) = (398 – 239)/398 = 0.3995. The IPCC reports predict an enhanced greenhouse effect from human emissions. According to the above arithmetic solutions, Earth’s observed greenhouse factors are equal to the theoretical ones without any deviation or enhancement. — The first IPCC report states that cloud radiative forcing is governed by cloud properties as cloud amount, reflectivity, vertical distribution and optical depth. Here we show that the TOA net CRF (= SWCRF + LWCRF) in equilibrium is equivalent to TOA net clear-sky imbalance, hence to determine its magnitude only clear-sky fluxes are needed.

How to cite: Zagoni, M.: Sir John Houghton (30 December 1931 — 15 April 2020) and radiation transfer, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1, 2021.

EGU21-11304 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Trends in spectrally resolved OLR from 10 years of IASI measurements

Simon Whitburn, Lieven Clarisse, Andy Delcloo, Steven Dewitte, Marie Bouillon, Maya George, Sarah Safieddine, Pierre Coheur, and Cathy Clerbaux

The Earth's Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) is a key component in the study of climate. As part of the Earth's radiation budget, it reflects how the Earth-atmosphere system compensates the incoming solar radiation at the top of the atmosphere. At equilibrium, the two quantities compensate each other on average. Any variation of the climate drivers (e.g. greenhouse gases) causes an energy imbalance which leads to a climate response (e.g. surface temperature increase), with the effect of bringing the radiation budget back to equilibrium. Considerable improvements in our understanding of the Earth-atmosphere system and of its long-term changes have been achieved in the last four decades through the exploitation of measurements from dedicated broadband instruments. However, such instruments only provide spectrally integrated OLR over a broad spectral range and are therefore not well suited for tracking separately the impact of the different parameters affecting the OLR.

Better constraints can, in principle, be obtained from spectrally resolved OLR (i.e. the integrand of broadband OLR, in units of W m-2 cm-1) derived from infrared hyperspectral sounders. Recently, a dedicated algorithm was developed to derive clear-sky spectrally resolved OLR from the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) at the 0.25 cm-1 native spectral sampling of the L1C spectra (Whitburn et al. 2020).  Here, we analyze the changes in 10 years (2008-2017) of the IASI-derived OLR and we relate them to known changes in greenhouse gases concentrations (CO2, CH4, H2O, …) and climate phenomena activity such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO).

Whitburn, S., Clarisse, L., Bauduin, S., George, M., Hurtmans, D., Safieddine, S., Coheur, P. F., and Clerbaux, C. (2020). Spectrally Resolved Fuxes from IASI Data: Retrieval algorithm for Clear-Sky Measurements. Journal of Climate. doi: 10.1175/jcli-d-19-0523.1

How to cite: Whitburn, S., Clarisse, L., Delcloo, A., Dewitte, S., Bouillon, M., George, M., Safieddine, S., Coheur, P., and Clerbaux, C.: Trends in spectrally resolved OLR from 10 years of IASI measurements, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11304, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11304, 2021.

EGU21-13961 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Libera – Observing and Understanding Earth’s Energy Budget

Maria Z. Hakuba, Peter Pilewskie, and Graeme Stephens and the Libera Science Team

The recently selected NASA mission Libera, named for the daughter of Ceres in Roman mythology, will provide continuity of the Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) Earth radiation budget (ERB) observations from space.

Seamless extension of the ERB climate data record is achieved by acquiring integrated radiances over the CERES FM6-heritage broad spectral bands in the shortwave (0.3 to 5 μm), longwave (5 to 50 μm) and total (0.3 to beyond 100 μm). To gain deeper insight into shortwave energy deposition, Libera adds a split-shortwave band (0.7 to 5 μm) that allows to provide deeper insight into shortwave energy deposition.

Libera’s advanced detector technologies is based on vertically aligned black-carbon nanotubes with closed-loop electrical substitution radiometry to achieve radiometric uncertainty of approximately 0.2%. Additionally, a wide field-of-view camera is employed to provide scene context and explore pathways for separating future ERB missions from complex imagers.

This presentation will summarize Libera’s attributes and mission goals, as well as some of the applications of the camera radiances, and the role of the additional split-shortwave channel that splits the shortwave band into its visible and near-IR contributions. This split is vital for the better understanding of shortwave absorption, feedbacks, and planetary albedo variability. The hemispheric symmetry of planetary albedo, as observed by CERES, is not achieved by most state-of-the-art climate models and is associated with long-standing biases in circulation and cloud properties. We will exemplify the study of processes relevant to albedo symmetry by means of CMIP6 simulations that provide the visible and near-IR fluxes.

How to cite: Hakuba, M. Z., Pilewskie, P., and Stephens, G. and the Libera Science Team: Libera – Observing and Understanding Earth’s Energy Budget, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13961, 2021.

EGU21-13200 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Comparative analysis of the incoming surface and outgoing top of atmosphere solar radiation based on MERRA-2 & CERES data

Michael Stamatis, Nikolaos Hatzianastassiou, Marios Bruno Korras Carraca, Christos Matsoukas, Martin Wild, and Ilias Vardavas

The incoming solar radiation at the top of the atmosphere (TOA), and especially at the Earth’s surface, determines the energy balance of our planet and regulates its climate. During the last decades, variations in the incoming surface solar radiation (SSR) have been observed, which depend on the atmosphere’s transparency. This phenomenon, known as global dimming and brightening (GDB), plays an important role in climate change and global warming. The present study examines the variability and changes of both SSR and the outgoing solar radiation at the TOA (OSR) based on long-term satellite data and ground truth measurements, but also reanalysis data, also with an aim to inter-compare and validate the changes of SSR (ΔSSR or GDB) and OSR (ΔOSR) in order to ensure the highest accuracy of the findings. For this analysis, mean monthly SSR and OSR fluxes are used at the global scale and over the last several decades. More specifically, SSR and OSR solar fluxes are used from the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications v.2 (MERRA-2) reanalysis data for the 40-year period 01/1980 - 12/2020 and from the satellite Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System Energy Balanced and Filled (CERES-EBAF) database for the 20-year period 03/2000 - 07/2020. The spatial resolution of CERES-EBAF dataset is 1°×1° latitude and longitude. MERRA-2 data, originally provided on a 0.5°×0.625° horizontal grid, are regridded on the CERES-EBAF spatial resolution (1°×1°). The SSR and ΔSSR fluxes from MERRA-2 and CERES are compared to each other, and they are both assessed through comparisons against ground measurements from the two major reference station networks, namely the Global Energy Balance Archive (GEBA), and the Baseline Surface Radiation Network (BSRN). The OSR and ΔOSR fluxes from MERRA-2 are assessed through comparison against corresponding fluxes from the CERES satellite measurements. The data analysis examines the spatio-temporal distribution and the trends of SSR (ΔSSR or GDB) and OSR, using both radiation fluxes and their deseasonalized anomalies. Special emphasis is given to the accurate estimation of GDB and the associated uncertainty, while attempting to reduce this uncertainty using the results of the analysis at the top of the atmosphere.

How to cite: Stamatis, M., Hatzianastassiou, N., Korras Carraca, M. B., Matsoukas, C., Wild, M., and Vardavas, I.: Comparative analysis of the incoming surface and outgoing top of atmosphere solar radiation based on MERRA-2 & CERES data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13200, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13200, 2021.

EGU21-1416 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

The Global Energy Balance as represented in CMIP6 climate models  

Martin Wild

A plausible simulation of the global energy balance is a first-order requirement for a credible climate model. In the present study I investigate the representation of the global energy balance in 40 state-of-the-art global climate models participating in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6). In the CMIP6 multi-model mean, the magnitudes of the energy balance components are often in better agreement with recent reference estimates compared to earlier model generations  such as CMIP5 on a global mean basis. However, the inter-model spread in the representation of many of the components remains substantial, often on the order of 10-20 Wm-2 globally,  except for aspects of the shortwave clear-sky budgets, which are now more consistently simulated by the CMIP6 models. The substantial inter-model spread in the simulated global mean latent heat fluxes in the CMIP6 models, exceeding 20% (18 Wm-2),  further implies also large discrepancies in their representation of the global water balance. From a historic perspective of model development over the past decades, the largest adjustments in the magnitudes of the simulated present-day global mean energy balance components occurred in the shortwave atmospheric clear-sky absorption and the surface downward longwave radiation. Both components were gradually adjusted upwards over several model generations, on the order of 10 Wm-2, to reach 73 and 344 Wm-2, respectively in the CMIP6 multi-model means. Thereby, CMIP6 has become the first model generation that largely remediates long-standing model deficiencies related to an overestimation in surface downward shortwave and compensational underestimation in downward longwave radiation in its multi-model mean (Wild 2020).

Published in: Wild, M., 2020: The global energy balance as represented in CMIP6 climate models. Clim Dyn 55, 553–577. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-020-05282-7

 

How to cite: Wild, M.: The Global Energy Balance as represented in CMIP6 climate models  , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1416, 2021.

Equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) and transient climate response (TCR) are some of the most fundamental properties characterising the future climate. Progress in estimating climate sensitivity over the last three decades has been hampered by a large climate model spread of ECS and TCR estimates, and more recently by a large increase in ECS predicted by several models in the latest generation of the Climate Model Intercomparison Project 6 (CMIP6). Clouds have been identified as the major source of this uncertainty and the recent increase in estimated ECS. A "too few, too bright" model cloud problem has been found in several regions of the globe, including tropical latitudes and the Southern Ocean. Southern Ocean has also been a major focus of changes in model microphysics in an effort to simulate more realistic supercooled liquid clouds. Here, we focus on the too few, too bright problem in the Southern Ocean in CMIP6 models and its possible relation to climate sensitivity. We explore the possibility of applying new emergent constraints on climate sensitivity based on metrics of the too few, too bright problem. We use satellite and and ship-based observational datasets such as lidar and radiometer observations for constraining climate sensitivity and evaluation of clouds in this region across generations of CMIP models.

How to cite: Kuma, P. and Bender, F.: Climate sensitivity and the Southern Ocean: the effect of the "too few, too bright" model cloud problem, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14733, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14733, 2021.

Energy budget estimates of the effective climate sensitivity (effCS) are derived based on estimates of the historical forcing and of observations of the sea surface temperature variations and the ocean heat uptake. Recent revisions to Greenhouse gas forcing and aerosol forcing estimates are included and the data is extended to 2018. We consider two different approaches to derive the effCS from the energy budget: 1) a difference of the energy budget between the recent period 2005-2018 and a base period 1861-1880 (following Sherwood 2020) and 2)  a regression of the differential form of energy budget over the period 1955-2017 (following Gregory et al. 2020). These estimates of the effCS over the historical period are representative of the climate feedback experienced by the climate during the historical period. When accounting for the uncertainty in the forcing, the surface temperature and the ocean heat uptake estimates plus the uncertainty due to the internal variability we find a range of effCS of [1.0;9.7] (at the 95%CL) with a median of 2.0 K with approach (1) and [1.2;2.7] with a median of 1.7 K with approch (2). We find that the lower and the upper tail of the distribution in effCS arise dominantly from the uncertainty in the historical forcing, particularly for the regression method, and at a lower extent for the difference method. This is consistent with previous studies (e.g. Lewis and Curry 2018 and Sherwood et al. 2020).

Using the same approach based on historical observations but accounting for the pattern effect and the temperature dependence of the feedback estimated with climate model simulations, we derive new estimates of the effECS that should encompass the equilibrium climate sensitivity (assuming that climate model simulate properly the pattern effect and the temperature dependence of feedback). We find that adding the pattern effect and the temperature dependence of the feedbacks shifts upwards the median of the effECS and increases significantly the uncertainty range. For the difference method, the median is now 2.5 K and the uncertainty range [1.1;17.2]. For the regression method the median is now 2.0 K and the uncertainty range is [1.2;4.7] K ((5-95%). On the overall, we find that the regression method performs better to constraint the equilibrium climate sensitivity and that the major source of uncertainties comes from the differences in the simulation of the pattern effect among climate models rather than the uncertainties on the historical forcing.

How to cite: Chenal, J. and Meyssignac, B.: Estimate of equilibrium climate sensitivity and uncertainties by using observations and CMIP6 global coupled climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14682, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14682, 2021.

EGU21-1197 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Humidity-dependence of Climate Sensitivity

Stella Bourdin, Lukas Kluft, and Bjorn Stevens

We study how the vertical distribution of relative humidity (RH) affects climate sensitivity (CS), even if it remains unchanged with warming. Using a one-dimensional radiative-convective equilibrium model, konrad, we show that the climate sensitivity depends on the shape of the vertical distribution of humidity, an effect we call humidity-dependence: Moister atmospheres were shown to have a larger CS, increasingly so with warmer temperature, consistent with our understanding of how water vapor influences the transmissivity of the atmospheric window (Nakajima et al., 1992; Koll & Cronin, 2018). CS is further shown to increase with increasing humidity in the upper troposphere but decreases with increases in humidity in the lower mid-troposphere. We interpret these effects in terms of the effective emission height of water vapor. Differences in the vertical distribution of RH are shown to explain a large part of the 10 to 30% differences in clear-sky sensitivity seen in climate and storm-resolving models. The results imply that convective aggregation reduces climate sensitivity, even when the degree of aggregation does not change with warming. Combining our findings with relative humidity trends in reanalysis data shows a tendency toward Earth becoming more sensitive to forcing over time. These trends and their height variation merit further study.

How to cite: Bourdin, S., Kluft, L., and Stevens, B.: Humidity-dependence of Climate Sensitivity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1197, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1197, 2021.

EGU21-6534 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Why does the climate response to greenhouse warming and greenhouse cooling differ? 

Jennifer Kay and Jason Chalmers

While the long-standing quest to constrain equilibrium climate sensitivity has resulted in intense scrutiny of the processes controlling idealized greenhouse warming, the processes controlling idealized greenhouse cooling have received less attention. Here, differences in the climate response to increased and decreased carbon dioxide concentrations are assessed in state-of-the-art fully coupled climate model experiments. One hundred and fifty years after an imposed instantaneous forcing change, surface global warming from a carbon dioxide doubling (abrupt-2xCO2, 2.43 K) is larger than the surface global cooling from a carbon dioxide halving (abrupt-0p5xCO2, 1.97 K). Both forcing and feedback differences explain these climate response differences. Multiple approaches show the radiative forcing for a carbon dioxide doubling is ~10% larger than for a carbon dioxide halving. In addition, radiative feedbacks are less negative in the doubling experiments than in the halving experiments. Specifically, less negative tropical shortwave cloud feedbacks and more positive subtropical cloud feedbacks lead to more greenhouse 2xCO2 warming than 0.5xCO2 greenhouse cooling. Motivated to directly isolate the influence of cloud feedbacks on these experiments, additional abrupt-2xCO2 and abrupt-0p5xCO2 experiments with disabled cloud-climate feedbacks were run. Comparison of these “cloud-locked” simulations with the original “cloud active” simulations shows cloud feedbacks help explain the nonlinear global surface temperature response to greenhouse warming and greenhouse cooling. Overall, these results demonstrate that both radiative forcing and radiative feedbacks are needed to explain differences in the surface climate response to increased and decreased carbon dioxide concentrations.

How to cite: Kay, J. and Chalmers, J.: Why does the climate response to greenhouse warming and greenhouse cooling differ? , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6534, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6534, 2021.

EGU21-1877 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Comparison of climate response to marine cloud brightening and ocean albedo modification: A model study

Mengying Zhao, Long Cao, Lei Duan, Govindasamy Bala, and Ken Caldeira

Solar radiation modification (SRM), an artificial intervention to reduce the amount of solar radiation reaching the surface, has been proposed as a potential option to ameliorate some undesired consequences of global warming. Marine cloud brightening (MCB) and ocean albedo modification (OAM) are two proposed SRM approaches. MCB aims to cool the planet by increasing marine cloud albedo that might be achieved by injecting sea salt into low marine cloud.  OAM aims to cool the planet by increasing surface ocean albedo that might be achieved by using highly reflective microbubbles over ocean. There is speculation that climate effect of OAM and MCB would be similar as forcing is applied only over ocean in both cases.

In this study, we use NCAR CESM model to compare climate response in  these two SRM approaches under the framework of “fast versus slow response”. The term “fast” refers to climate adjustment that is associated with rapid adjustment of the atmosphere and land surface, and “slow” refers to climate feedbacks that are associated with the slow evolution of sea surface temperature.

In our simulation we find that to offset global warming from a doubling of atmospheric CO2, OAM requires a stronger negative effective radiative forcing than that of MCB, indicating MCB is more effective in producing cooling per unit of radiative forcing. This is mainly associated with differing fast climate adjustment between OAM and MCB forcing. OAM increases upward shortwave radiation from surface and heats the lower atmosphere, causing low-level clouds to dissipate. A reduction in low cloudiness allows more solar radiation to reach the surface, partly offsetting the negative radiative forcing from increase in ocean albedo. At equilibrium state, however, OAM and MCB produces similar pattern of change in temperature and hydrological cycle, but prominent differences in climate response is observed over the tropical ocean where OAM produces larger reduction in precipitation and evaporation than that of MCB. Our results indicate that there is similarity between climate response to marine cloud brightening and ocean albedo increase, but caution should be exercised when using climate response from one to infer the other. 

How to cite: Zhao, M., Cao, L., Duan, L., Bala, G., and Caldeira, K.: Comparison of climate response to marine cloud brightening and ocean albedo modification: A model study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1877, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1877, 2021.

EGU21-4502 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Link between opaque cloud properties and atmospheric dynamics in observations and simulations of current climate in the Tropics, and impact on future predictions

Miguel Perpina, Vincent Noel, Helene Chepfer, Rodrigo Guzman, and Artem Feofilov

Climate models predict a weakening of the tropical atmospheric circulation, more specifically a slowdown of Hadley and Walker circulations. Many climate models predict that global warming will have a major impact on cloud properties, including their geographic and vertical distribution. Climate feedbacks from clouds, which amplify warming when positive, are today the main source of uncertainty in climate forecasts. Tropical clouds play a key role in the redistribution of solar energy and their evolution will likely affect climate. Therefore, it is crucial to better understand how tropical clouds will evolve in a changing climate. Among cloud properties, the vertical distribution is sensitive to climate change. Active sensors integrated into satellites, such as CALIOP (Cloud-Aerosol LIdar with Orthogonal Polarization), make it possible to obtain a detailed vertical distribution of clouds. CALIOP measurements and calibration are more stable over time and more precise than passive remote sensing satellite detectors. CALIOP observations can be simulated in the atmospheric conditions predicted by climate models using lidar simulators such as COSP (CFMIP Observation Simulator Package). Moreover, cloud properties directly drive the Cloud Radiative Effect (CRE). Understanding how models predict cloud vertical distribution will evolve in the future has implications for how models predict the Cloud Radiative Effect (CRE) at the Top of the Atmosphere (TOA) will evolve in the future.

The purpose of our study is to compare, firstly, based on satellite observations (GOCCP) and reanalyzes (ERA5), we will establish the relationship between atmospheric dynamic circulation, opaque cloud properties and TOA CRE. Then, we will compare this observed relationship with the one found in climate model simulations of current climate conditions (CESM1 and IPSL-CM6). Finally, we will identify how model biases in present climate conditions influence the cloud feedback spread between models in a warmer climate.

How to cite: Perpina, M., Noel, V., Chepfer, H., Guzman, R., and Feofilov, A.: Link between opaque cloud properties and atmospheric dynamics in observations and simulations of current climate in the Tropics, and impact on future predictions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4502, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4502, 2021.

Clouds strongly modulate Earth's radiative budget, and uncertainties in numerical model simulations of the global cloud field contribute substantially to uncertainties in future warming. In coupled atmosphere-ocean General Circulation Model (GCM) simulations, the global cloud field and its radiative effect are well correlated with global average surface temperature. However, GCM simulations with prescribed Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) from observational SST reconstructions over the historical period show time-varying relationships between the cloud field and average surface temperature (known as the "pattern effect"). We show that CERES/EBAF observational data confirms the presence of a second mode (in addition to mean SST) in particular in low cloud amount (and correspondingly SWCRE) that is consistent with variations in tropical atmospheric stability in ERA-Interim reanalysis data. This second mode in observations is tied to ENSO, and evolves in quadrature to ENSO indexes. It arises from differences in surface temperature change between regions of tropical deep convection and the tropical (or global) average. In contrast to the multidecadal trends over the full historical period, trends in this second mode since the year 2000 are small. The PCMDI/AMIPII SSTs recommended for CMIP6 stand out as having the largest trend over the full historical period. Different SST reconstructions agree on a trend over the satellite period - specifically the 1980s-90s - that is much larger than what coupled GCM simulations show: In forced coupled GCM simulations the regions of deep convection warm order 10% more than the tropical average, whereas over the satellite period the amplification is order +50%  in the AMIP simulations and in estimates using rainfall observations to identify regions of deep convection.

How to cite: Fueglistaler, S. and Silvers, L.: On the strongly negative cloud feedback over the satellite period implied by observational SST reconstructions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1760, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1760, 2021.

EGU21-4937 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Persistence and variability of Earth's inter-hemispheric albedo symmetry

Aiden Jönsson and Frida Bender

Earth's albedo is observed to be symmetric about the equator on long time scales despite having an asymmetric distribution of land and aerosol sources between the northern and southern hemispheres. This is made possible by the distribution of clouds, which compensates the clear-sky albedo asymmetry almost exactly. We investigate the variability of the inter-hemispheric difference in reflected solar radiation (asymmetry) on the monthly time scale using decomposed reflected radiative fluxes in the CERES EBAF satellite data record. We find that the variations in the degree of symmetry on shorter timescales is strongly controlled by tropical and subtropical processes affecting cloud distributions. States of high asymmetry coincide with opposing phases of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO); during El Niño (La Niña) conditions, the southern (northern) hemisphere is reflecting anomalously more than the other, perturbing the inter-hemispheric albedo symmetry. This perturbation also impacts the inter-hemispheric difference in net radiative fluxes, i.e. during states of asymmetry, the hemisphere that is reflecting less solar radiation also absorbs more energy in the net radiation balance.

We also compare the variability of the asymmetry in simulations from coupled models in Phase 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project with observations, and find that model mean asymmetry bias is primarily determined by biases in reflected radiation in the midlatitudes. Models that overestimate the variability of the asymmetry also have larger biases in reflected radiation over the tropics. Both bias and variability are generally improved in atmospheric model simulations driven with historical sea surface temperatures.

How to cite: Jönsson, A. and Bender, F.: Persistence and variability of Earth's inter-hemispheric albedo symmetry, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4937, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4937, 2021.

EGU21-153 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Cloudiness and Earth's hemispheric albedo symmetry

George Datseris and Bjorn Stevens

Radiation measurements at the top of the atmosphere show that the two hemispheres of Earth reflect the same amount of shortwave radiation in the long time average (so-called hemispheric albedo symmetry). Here we try to find the origin of this symmetry by analyzing radiation data directly, as well as cloud properties. The radiation data, while being mostly noise, hint that a hemispheric communication mechanism is likely but do not provide enough information to identify it. Cloud properties allow us to define an effective cloud albedo field, much more useful than the commonly used cloud area fraction. Based on that we first show that extra cloud albedo of the SH exactly compensates the extra surface albedo of the NH. We then identify that this this compensation comes almost exclusively from the storm tracks of the extratropics. We close discussing the importance of approaching planetary albedo as a whole and open questions that remain.

How to cite: Datseris, G. and Stevens, B.: Cloudiness and Earth's hemispheric albedo symmetry, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-153, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-153, 2021.

EGU21-9929 | vPICO presentations | CL4.18

Implied ocean heat transport in CMIP6 models

Francesca Pearce, Alejandro Bodas-Salcedo, Christopher Thomas, and Thomas Allen

The importance of heat transport in the ocean to maintain energy balance between different regions is well known, with heat typically being transported from the Equator to high latitudes. Ocean heat transport (OHT) can be separated into two different components; a divergent component which contributes directly to the Earths’ energy budget as it is the energy that converges in an ocean basin to balance the release of heat into the atmosphere, and a rotational component which does not affect the energy budget. Climate models show significant uncertainty in projections of ocean heat uptake, both in terms of the magnitude and geographical pattern. Since the oceans’ response under climate changes depends on the patterns of surface energy fluxes, it is important to assess the simulation of surface fluxes as a potential constraint of transient and long-term responses of the Earths’ climate. Assuming that the ocean absorbs all of the excess energy within the Earth system, it is possible to directly relate the net surface flux (NSF) over the ocean to divergent OHT, potentially providing a metric to quantify how well climate models are able to reproduce observed patterns of NSF and OHT. In this work, we present a detailed comparison of different methods used to calculate divergent OHT from the NSF over the ocean using data from various CMIP6 models. The methods investigated include a least-squares solution to a matrix equation in which energy convergence is related to NSF via the Earths’ energy imbalance, and solving a Poisson equation over the ocean surface (see Forget and Ferreira 2020). Comparison to observational estimates of OHT requires that the observational data set includes only sources of divergent heat transport, which is often not the case. Therefore, we intend to produce a data set of radiative energy fluxes that are consistent with both energy and water constraints (see Rodell et al. 2015, L’Ecuyer et al. 2015, Thomas et al. 2020) which can be subject to the same methods of determining OHT, and see how these estimates compare to the results from climate models.

How to cite: Pearce, F., Bodas-Salcedo, A., Thomas, C., and Allen, T.: Implied ocean heat transport in CMIP6 models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9929, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9929, 2021.

CL4.19 – Dynamics of the atmospheric circulation in past, present and future climates

EGU21-278 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Local and remote Southern Hemisphere extratropical circulation responses to soil moisture anomalies in Australia

Olivia Romppainen-Martius, Kathrin Wehrli, and Marco Rohrer

Hemisphere-wide remote Rossby wave responses of the upper-level flow to soil moisture anomalies have been reported for the Northern Hemisphere. Model experiments varying soil moisture over North America point to the involvement of both linear and non-linear wave dynamics. Here three sets of model experiments are performed with the Community Earth System Model to study the role of soil moisture anomalies as a boundary forcing for the formation of extra-tropical upper-level Rossby wave patterns during Southern Hemisphere summer.

In the model experiments, soil moisture over Australia is set to +1STD (wet) and to -1STD (dry) of the ERA-Interim reanalysis climatology for the years 2009 to 2016. With his set-up 50 ensemble members are run and the wet and dry simulations compared. The local response to the soil moisture forcing is a positive heating anomaly in the dry simulations that results in a thermal low-like circulation anomaly with an anomalous surface low and an anomalous upper-level anticyclone.

A circum-hemispheric flow response is identified both in the extra-tropical upper-level flow and in the surface storm tracks that overall resembles a positive Southern Annular Mode-like flow anomaly in the dry simulations. The structure of this atmospheric response strongly depends on the background flow. During two El Niño summers the response is strongly influenced by nonlinear Rossby wave forcing, while during two La Niña summers the flow response resembles a circum-hemispheric wave train reflecting linear wave propagation.

How to cite: Romppainen-Martius, O., Wehrli, K., and Rohrer, M.: Local and remote Southern Hemisphere extratropical circulation responses to soil moisture anomalies in Australia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-278, 2021.

EGU21-1165 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Contrasting dynamics of short and long blocks in the Northern Hemisphere

Marie Drouard, Tim Woollings, David Sexton, and Carol McSweeney

In this study, we aim at identifying dynamical differences between short blocks, which last only five days, and long blocks, which last at least ten days, to better characterise long blocks. We show that long blocks often involve cyclonic Rossby wave breaking, while short blocks are equally associated with cyclonic and anticyclonic wave breaking. This main result is reproduced in several coupled climate models. We propose three mechanisms that might explain the lower number of long anticyclonic blocks: 1/ a downstream reinforcement of the anticyclone during anticyclonic blocks might be associated with a stronger downstream advection of the block; 2/ the mean zonal wind is reinforced by synoptic eddies towards a more northward position during anticyclonic blocks, whereas synoptic eddies force the mean zonal wind to the south of the block during cyclonic blocks, which has been previously shown to be associated with more persistent weather patterns; 3/ strong and/or sustained eddy feedback is needed to maintain long anticyclonic blocks. All these parameters combined might explain why blocks last longer and why anticyclonic blocks are less present at extreme durations.

How to cite: Drouard, M., Woollings, T., Sexton, D., and McSweeney, C.: Contrasting dynamics of short and long blocks in the Northern Hemisphere, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1165, 2021.

EGU21-10258 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Identification and characterization of an atmospheric blocking event over the South Pacific from August 31 to September 05, 2019

Jamyle Magalhães and Ana Cristina Pinto de Almeida Palmeira

Atmospheric circulation in mid-latitudes is characterized by a westerlies zonal flow. On blocking conditions, this flow is interrupted by a large almost-stationary anticyclone. This situation, there is a splitting of the jet stream, what modify zonal flow pattern and change the normal eastward displacement of transients. There are two blocking types frequently observed in South Hemisphere (SH): dipole type blocking – occurs when a cut-off low is located north of the anticyclone, which characterize a dipole; omega type blocking – occurs when there is an arrangement of two cut-off lows and the blocking high like Greek letter Ω (omega, inverted in SH). First, the subjective methods were created to identify these systems, later, aiming at numerical modeling, the objective methods, called zonal index, were created. Thus, the purpose of this study was to identify, through subjective and objective methods, a blocking system that occurred over South Pacific, on the west coast of South America, from August 31 to September 05, 2019. In this study, surface synoptic chart from Navy Hydrography Center (NHC) and images from Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES-16) in channel 13 (infrared) were used. In addition, data from Era5 reanalysis of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), with a horizontal resolution of 0.25°, were used to elaborate meteorological fields and zonal index calculation. The identification criteria proposed by Casarin and Kousky (1982) were used for subjective analysis, and the Lejeñas (1984) for objective one. The analyzed fields indicate that the system had persisted for six days. In this period, the flow was split, the blocking high didn’t move more 25º of longitude and the zonal index remained negative, what satisfied all criteria used. Therefore, this event was characterized as atmospheric blocking of dipole kind.

How to cite: Magalhães, J. and Pinto de Almeida Palmeira, A. C.: Identification and characterization of an atmospheric blocking event over the South Pacific from August 31 to September 05, 2019, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10258, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10258, 2021.

EGU21-7743 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Observed and simulated zonally asymmetric zonal wind patterns under NAO conditions

Aslı İlhan, Deniz Demirhan, and Yurdanur Ünal

The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), coexistent meridional oscillation of subpolar Icelandic low and the subtropical Azores high dominates the Northern Hemispheric winter climate. Variability in the circulation of NAO may activate the extreme weather events, such as the enhanced zonal winds, in northeast America, Atlantic and Eurasia. On the other hand variability in the zonal wind patterns effects the position of the NAO events. It is more relevant to investigate the interaction between NAO and the weather patterns during the winter time since NAO is powerful during winter. Hence the wintertime weather systems are highly altered by such an impact. Analysis indicate that negative and positive phases of NAO mainly modulate the local cyclonic and anticyclonic wave characteristics and hence the zonally asymmetric circulation of the middle atmosphere. Zonal asymmetries in the weather patterns originate from ocean-continent temperature gradients and topographical contrasts after all solar incident radiation is almost uniform over the longitudes. Thus zonally asymmetric patterns for certain variables such as zonal winds show strong seasonal dependence and highly correlate with the climatological position of the NAO mainly in the winter hemisphere. In this study longitudinal differences in the zonal wind is analyzed in order to observe its strong influence on the evolution of NAO. Zonal asymmetries of zonal wind is examined by evaluating the deviation from zonal mean of the long term annual average of both winter and spring months from December to April. Zonal winds up to 100km for winter and spring is examined between 2006-2100 using CMIP5 MPI-ESM-MR RCP4.5 scenario for the extratropical and the polar latitudes. Additionally ERA5 reanalysis data is used to identify the ability of CMIP5 Reference Period (RP) data to capture the observed patterns for the years from 1979 to 2005.

Acknowledgements: This study is supported by TUBİTAK (The Scientific and Technology Research Council of Turkey), The Scientific and Technological Research Projects Funding Program, 1001. The projects number is 117Y327.

How to cite: İlhan, A., Demirhan, D., and Ünal, Y.: Observed and simulated zonally asymmetric zonal wind patterns under NAO conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7743, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7743, 2021.

Understanding the formation and evolution mechanisms of Ural blocking (UB) is of great importance for the prediction of UB and relevant extremes in east Asia. Using the 6-hourly ERA-Interim reanalysis data, this study quantifies the conservative and nonconservative processes in the lifecycle of UB through the lens of the hybrid Eulerian-Lagrangian local finite-amplitude wave activity (LWA) diagnostics. It is found that (i) as a wave activity source, eddy heat flux works to not only initiate the UB, but also prevent the wave activity of the blocking from dispersing downstream---the key characteristic of blocking; (ii) both the wave propagation and wave advection mechanisms are indispensable for the evolution of UB, playing a tug-of-war on the downstream development of wave activity; (iii) throughout the lifespan of UB, diabatic heating provides the most important damping mechanism for the wave activity both upstream and downstream.

How to cite: Wang, M., Zhang, Y., and Lu, J.: The evolution mechanisms of Ural blocking from the lens of local finite-amplitude wave activity budget analysis , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7195, 2021.

EGU21-9605 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Rossby wave activity associated with Euro-Atlantic weather regimes in the PRIMAVERA historical runs.

Paolo Ghinassi, Federico Fabiano, and Susanna Corti

In this study we aim to assess how the upper tropospheric Rossby wave activity is represented in the PRIMAVERA models. The low and high resolution historical coupled simulations will be compared with ERA5 reanalysis (spanning the 1979-2014 period) to enlighten model deficiencies in representing the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of Rossby wave activity and to emphasize the benefits of increased resolution. Our analysis focuses on the wintertime large scale circulation over the Euro-Atlantic sector.

A diagnostic based on Local Wave Activity (LWA) in isentropic coordinates is used to identify Rossby waves and to quantify their amplitude. LWA is partitioned into its stationary and transient components, to distinguish the contribution from planetary versus synoptic scale waves (i.e. wave packets). This diagnostic is then combined with another one to identify persistent and recurrent large scale circulation patterns, the so called weather regimes. Weather regimes in the Euro-Atlantic sector are identified with the usual approach of EOF decomposition and k-mean clustering applied to daily anomalies of Montgomery streamfunction, in order to have a consistent framework with LWA (which is defined in isentropic coordinates). A composite of transient LWA is realised for each weather regime to obtain the spatial distribution of Rossby wave activity associated with each weather regime.

Results show a marked intermodel variability in the ability of reproducing the correct (i.e. the one observed in reanalysis data) LWA distribution. Many of the models in fact fails to reproduce the localized (in space) maxima of LWA associated with each weather regime and to distribute LWA over a larger region compared to reanalysis. High resolution helps to correct this bias in the majority of the models, in particular in those where the low-resolution LWA distribution was already close to reanalysis. Finally, the temporal behaviour of the spatially averaged LWA in the examined period is discussed.

How to cite: Ghinassi, P., Fabiano, F., and Corti, S.: Rossby wave activity associated with Euro-Atlantic weather regimes in the PRIMAVERA historical runs., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9605, 2021.

EGU21-1790 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Reduced winter land sea contrast and its effects on mid-latitude atmospheric variability

Alice Portal, Claudia Pasquero, Fabio D'Andrea, Paolo Davini, and Mostafa Hamouda

Long term projections of the Northern Hemisphere winter climate show an overall increase of surface temperatures that is particularly amplified at Arctic latitudes. On top of this, projections agree in predicting a faster temperature increase on land than on sea surface, therefore a reduced winter land-sea contrast in the mid latitudes. Despite the robustness of this feature in climate projections, the response of the atmospheric system to a strongly reduced winter land-sea contrast has been scarcely investigated. Here, we study how it affects the low and high frequency variability in the extratropics using a simplified GCM, with a focus on the Atlantic and Pacific jets. Moreover, different sea surface temperatures are applied to the North Atlantic and North Pacific basins in order to simulate the presence of a differential warming, as in the well-known scenario of a North-Atlantic warming hole. 

How to cite: Portal, A., Pasquero, C., D'Andrea, F., Davini, P., and Hamouda, M.: Reduced winter land sea contrast and its effects on mid-latitude atmospheric variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1790, 2021.

South situations or days in which the South Wind (SE-S-SW) constitutes the predominant wind direction (mode) and one of the factors more determinants of the climatic conditions in terms of temperature and relative humidity in the autumn-winter period of the geographical region of southwestern Europe around the central territorial axis of the Bay of Biscay-Gascony.

According to our conclusions on the official data analyzed in thirteen meteorological stations in this region of southwestern Europe, for the 1961-2010 annual series, more than 43% of the autumn-winter days with prevailing winds from the South, or South Wind, register average temperature values ​​(T) higher than their respective autumn-winter average. Likewise, in eleven of the thirteen stations analyzed, for the same annual series, the average relative humidity (H) record corresponding to the set of autumn-winter days with predominant South Wind is lower than the respective mid autumn-winter and in the other two seasons both records are equal.

In the stations of the coastal region, such as Bilbao and Gijón, for the 1961-71 annual series, with an atmospheric circulation characterized, in all autumn-winter periods, by negative mean values ​​of the North Atlantic Oscillation index (NAO), the percentage frequency of South Wind situations is higher than that corresponding to the coastal stations of San Sebastián, Santander and Biarritz in the 1971-2010  annual series, as well as with respect to the percentage frequency for any other station and in both series.

The climatic and environmental conditions of this region of southwestern Europe are strongly affected by the tempering influence of the South Atlantic winds, following a process of orographic condensation-desiccation to windward and subsidence, adiabatic compression and rapid movement along the slopes, downwind of the Cantabrian-Pyrenean mountain range (Foehn effect).

Thus, the general atmospheric circulation over the region favors, especially in the autumn-winter period, the advections of humid and unstable air masses (storms and fronts) coming from the middle and subtropical latitudes of the North Atlantic, which generate anabatic south winds on the Iberian Peninsula, heading towards the Western Cantabrian-Pyrenean region and through it towards the continental Atlantic façade, but already more tempered and parched.

These southern situations are generated under conditions of atmospheric circulation and synoptic configuration defined by the interrelation between multiple oceanic and atmospheric patterns (in addition to solar, orographic factors...) that also largely determine the climatology of the entire oceanic and continental North Atlantic región.

As a great diversity of studies carried out have been collecting and demonstrating, the ocean-atmospheric patterns, both planetary and regional (ENSO, AMO, NAO, WeMO...) and the teleconnection between events or climatic phenomena generated by they and even in a very distant between them, constitute fundamental factors to define the atmospheric circulation and the climatology of the North Atlantic-Western Europe region (NAWE).

The empirical vision of the teleconnection between these ocean-atmospheric patterns requires the analysis of the significant statistical correlation coefficients between the indices of such factors or patterns, for which we will use the integrated program or set of programs "R".

 

                             

How to cite: San Martin Orbe, P.: Analysis of statistical correlation between the indices of the most determinant ocean-atmospheric patterns in the climatology of the North Atlantic-Western Europe (NA-WE), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7373, 2021.

EGU21-3096 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

SST fronts along the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio affect the atmospheric winter climatology primarily in the absence of storms

Thomas Spengler, Leonidas Tsopouridis, and Clemens Spensberger

The Gulf Stream and Kuroshio regions feature strong sea surface temperature (SST) gradients that influence cyclone development and the storm track. Smoothing the SSTs in either the North Atlantic or North Pacific has been shown to yield a reduction in cyclone activity, surface heat fluxes, and precipitation, as well as a southward shift of the storm track and the upper-level jet. To what extent these changes are attributable to changes in individual cyclone behaviour, however, remains unclear. Comparing simulations with realistic and smoothed SSTs in the atmospheric general circulation model AFES, we find that the intensification of individual cyclones in the Gulf Stream or Kuroshio region is only marginally affected by reducing the SST gradient. In contrast, we observe considerable changes in the climatological mean state, with a reduced cyclone activity in the North Atlantic and North Pacific storm tracks that are also shifted equator-ward in both basins. The upper-level jet in the Atlantic also shifts equator-ward, while the jet in the Pacific strengthens in its climatological position and extends further east. Surface heat fluxes, specific humidity, and precipitation also respond strongly to the smoothing of the SST, with a considerable decrease of their mean values on the warm side of the SST front. This decrease is more pronounced in the Gulf Stream than in the Kuroshio region, due to the amplified decrease in SST along the Gulf Stream SST front.  Considering the pertinent variables occurring within different radii of cyclones in each basin over their entire lifetime, we find cyclones to play only a secondary role in explaining the mean states differences between smoothed and realistic SST experiments.

How to cite: Spengler, T., Tsopouridis, L., and Spensberger, C.: SST fronts along the Gulf Stream and Kuroshio affect the atmospheric winter climatology primarily in the absence of storms, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3096, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3096, 2021.

EGU21-12654 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

A regime view of future atmospheric circulation changes in Northern mid-latitudes

Federico Fabiano, Virna L. Meccia, Paolo Davini, Paolo Ghinassi, and Susanna Corti

Future changes in the mid-latitude wintertime atmospheric circulation are studied from a weather regimes perspective. The analysis is based on daily geopotential height at 500 hPa during the extended winter season (NDJFM) from both CMIP5 and CMIP6 historical and scenario simulations. The model performance in reproducing the observed weather regimes during the historical period in the Euro-Atlantic (EAT) and Pacific-North American (PAC) sectors is first evaluated, showing a general improvement of CMIP6 models in terms of regime patterns, frequencies and variance ratio. The projected circulation changes in the future climate (2050-2100) under the different scenarios are analysed in terms of the change in the frequency and persistence of the regimes. Significant positive trends are found for the frequency of NAO+ and negative trends for the Scandinavian Blocking and Atlantic Ridge regimes. This confirms the tendency for the zonalization of the circulation in the EAT sector, with decreased latitudinal variability of the jet stream. For the PAC sector, significant changes are seen for the Pacific Trough regime (increase) and the Bering Ridge (decrease), while there is no agreement in the response of the two PNA regimes. The spread among the model responses in the most extreme scenarios is analysed through a multi-linear regression approach and linked to different levels of warming in the polar stratosphere, the tropical upper troposphere, the North Atlantic and the Arctic.

How to cite: Fabiano, F., Meccia, V. L., Davini, P., Ghinassi, P., and Corti, S.: A regime view of future atmospheric circulation changes in Northern mid-latitudes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12654, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12654, 2021.

EGU21-10104 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Increased frequency of Eurasian double jets linked to summer heat extremes in Europe

Efi Rousi, Kai Kornhuber, Goratz Beobide Arsuaga, Fei Luo, and Dim Coumou

Persistent summer extremes, such as heatwaves and droughts, can have considerable impacts on nature and societies. There is evidence that weather persistence has increased in Europe over the past decades, in association to changes in atmosphere dynamics, but uncertainties remain and the driving forces are not yet well understood. 

Particularly for Europe, the jet stream may affect surface weather significantly by modulating the North Atlantic storm tracks. Here, we examine the hypothesis that high-latitude warming and decreased westerlies in summer result in more double jets, consisting of two distinct maxima of the zonal wind in the upper troposphere, over the Eurasian sector. Previous work has shown that such double jet states are related to persistent blocking-like circulation in the mid-latitudes. 

We adapt a dynamical perspective of heat extreme trends by looking at large scale circulation and in particular, changes in the zonal mean zonal wind in different levels of the upper troposphere. We define clusters of jet states with the use of Self-Organizing Maps and analyze their characteristics. We find an increase in frequency and persistence of a cluster of double jet states for the period 1979-2019 during July-August (in ERA5 reanalysis data). Those states are linked to increased surface temperature and more frequent heatwaves compared to climatology over western, central, and northern Europe. Significant positive double jet anomalies are found to be dominant in the days preceding and/or coinciding with some of the most intense historical heatwaves in Europe, such as those of 2003 and 2018. A linear regression analysis shows that the increase in frequency and persistence of double jet states may explain part of the strong upward trend in heat extremes over these European regions.

How to cite: Rousi, E., Kornhuber, K., Beobide Arsuaga, G., Luo, F., and Coumou, D.: Increased frequency of Eurasian double jets linked to summer heat extremes in Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10104, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10104, 2021.

EGU21-15617 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

The role of diabatic heating in Ferrel cell dynamics

Orli Lachmy and Yohai Kaspi

The Ferrel cell consists of the zonal mean vertical and meridional winds in the midlatitudes. The continuity of the Ferrel circulation and the zonal mean momentum and heat budgets imply a collocation of the eddy-driven jet and poleward eddy heat flux maxima, under certain assumptions, including the negligibility of diabatic heating. The latter assumption is questioned, since midlatitude storms are associated with latent heating in the midtroposphere. In this study, the heat budget of the Ferrel cell in both hemispheres is examined, using the JRA55 reanalysis data set. The diabatic heating rate is significant close to the center of the Ferrel cell during winter and at the ascending branch during summer in both hemispheres. The interannual variability shows a positive correlation between the diabatic heating rate in the midlatitude midtroposphere and the latitudinal separation between the eddy heat flux and the eddy-driven jet maxima during winter in both hemispheres.

How to cite: Lachmy, O. and Kaspi, Y.: The role of diabatic heating in Ferrel cell dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15617, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15617, 2021.

EGU21-15342 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Suppression of Baroclinic Eddies by Strong Jets

Or Hadas and Yohai Kaspi

The midlatitude storm tracks are one of the most prominent features of extratropical climate. Despite the theoretical expectation, based on baroclinic instability theory that baroclinic eddy strength correlates with jet intensity, there is a decrease in storm-track activity during midwinter over the Pacific compared to the shoulder seasons. Recent studies suggest this phenomenon is a result of the general circulation effect on the storm-track through interaction with the jet-stream. To isolate the effect of jet strength, we conduct a series of GCM experiments with a systematically varied jet intensity. The simulations are analyzed using Lagrangian tracking to understand the response from a single eddy perspective. The results of the Lagrangian analysis show that while the response of upper-level eddies is dominated by a reduction in the amount of tracked features, the lower-level eddies' response is also affected by a reduction in their lifetime. Analyzing the effect of the jet strength on the pairing between the upper- and lower-level eddies, we show how the jet intensification break the baroclinic wave structure and limits its growth. Furthermore, we show that these results can be settled with linear baroclinic instability models if the eddies' spatial scale is considered. The intensification of the jet and increase in the deformation radius shift the preferred scale for growth from the synoptic-scale toward the planetary-scale, consistent with the reduction in storm activity. This mechanism potentially explains the midwinter suppression of storm activity over the Pacific and the difference from the response over the Atlantic.

How to cite: Hadas, O. and Kaspi, Y.: Suppression of Baroclinic Eddies by Strong Jets, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15342, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15342, 2021.

EGU21-5998 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

An Eddy-Zonal Flow Feedback Model for Propagating Annular Modes and their Dynamics

Sandro Lubis and Pedram Hassanzadeh

There is strong evidence that a positive feedback between the zonal-mean wind anomalies and the eddies (i.e. a positive feedback of EOF1 onto itself) is important for maintaining the wind anomalies associated with the annular modes. However, a recent study by Lubis and Hassanzadeh, (2021, JAS) shows that under some circumstances, EOF1 and EOF2 can interact and exert feedbacks on each other at some lag times, affecting the time scale of the annular modes. Building upon the seminal work of Lorenz and Hartmann (2001, JAS), we introduced a reduced-order model for coupled EOF1 and EOF2 that accounts for potential cross-EOF eddy-zonal flow feedbacks. Using the analytical solution of this model, we derive conditions for the existence of the propagating regime based on the feedback strengths. Using this model, and idealized GCMs and stochastic prototypes, we show that cross-EOF feedbacks play an important role in controlling the persistence of the annular modes by setting the frequency of the oscillation. We find that stronger cross-EOF feedbacks lead to less persistent annular modes. The underlying dynamics of the cross-EOF feedbacks for propagating annular modes in both reanalysis and an idealized GCM are also investigated. Using a finite-amplitude wave activity (FAWA) framework, we show that the cross-EOF feedbacks result from the out-of-phase oscillations of EOF1 (north-south jet displacement) and EOF2 (jet pulsation) leading to an orchestrated combination of equatorward propagation of wave activity (a baroclinic process) and nonlinear wave breaking (a barotropic process), which altogether act to reduce the total eddy forcings. The results highlight the importance of considering the coupling of EOFs and cross-EOF feedbacks to fully understand the natural and forced variability of the zonal-mean large-scale circulation.

Reference: Lubis, S. W., & Hassanzadeh, P. (2021). An Eddy–Zonal Flow Feedback Model for Propagating Annular ModesJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences78(1), 249-267.

How to cite: Lubis, S. and Hassanzadeh, P.: An Eddy-Zonal Flow Feedback Model for Propagating Annular Modes and their Dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5998, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5998, 2021.

EGU21-6528 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Projections of future atmospheric circulation changes using the extratropical linear step response to tropical precipitation

Natasha Senior, Adrian Matthews, and Manoj Joshi

The global hydrological cycle is expected to intensify under a warming climate. Since extratropical Rossby wave trains are triggered by tropical convection, this will impact the atmospheric circulation in the extratropics. Owing to the approximate linearity of the teleconnection pattern, we can use a method based in linear response theory to quantify this extratropical response using a step response function. We have examined the step response functions for a selection of CMIP5 pre-industrial control runs and reanalysis data,  in particular studying the response during the boreal winter. We found there to a large intermodel spread in the response pattern owing to differences in representations of the model basic state. In the current work, we use a 'perfect model' approach to conduct a systematic study of the performance of the linear response method in projecting future winter-time northern hemisphere circulation changes using the present day (1986-2005) model basic states, comparing these to those projected by CMIP5 models under a 3 degree rise in mean global temperature anomaly above pre-industrial. We demonstrate how, given a projected precipitation change pattern, the linear response theory method can compete with the models in providing faithful projections for the extratropical circulation changes.

How to cite: Senior, N., Matthews, A., and Joshi, M.: Projections of future atmospheric circulation changes using the extratropical linear step response to tropical precipitation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6528, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6528, 2021.

EGU21-7424 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Seasonality of Polar Warming in Climates with Very High Carbon Dioxide.

Matthew Henry and Geoffrey Vallis

Observations of warm past climates and projections of future climate change show that the Arctic warms more than the global mean, particularly during winter months. Past warm climates such as the early Eocene had above-freezing Arctic continental temperatures year-round. In this work, we show that an enhanced increase of Arctic continental winter temperatures with increased greenhouse gases is a robust consequence of the smaller surface heat capacity of land (compared to ocean), without recourse to other processes or feedbacks. We use a General Circulation Model (GCM) with no clouds or sea ice and a simple representation of land. The equator-to-pole surface temperature gradient falls with increasing CO2, but this is only a near-surface phenomenon and occurs with little change in total meridional heat transport. The high-latitude land has about twice as much warming in winter than in summer, whereas high-latitude ocean has very little seasonality in warming. A surface energy balance model shows how the combination of the smaller surface heat capacity of land and the nonlinearity of the temperature dependence of surface longwave emission gives rise to the seasonality of land surface temperature change. The atmospheric temperature change is surface-enhanced in winter as the atmosphere is near radiative-advective equilibrium, but more vertically homogeneous in summer as the Arctic land gets warm enough to trigger convection. While changes in clouds, sea ice and ocean heat transport undoubtedly play a role in high latitude warming, these results show that surface-enhanced atmospheric temperature change and enhanced land surface temperature change in winter can happen in their absence for very basic and robust reasons.

How to cite: Henry, M. and Vallis, G.: Seasonality of Polar Warming in Climates with Very High Carbon Dioxide., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7424, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7424, 2021.

EGU21-7316 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

On the role of atmospheric feedbacks in sustaining the anomalous warmth of the MIS-11 interglacial

Brian Crow, Matthias Prange, and Michael Schulz

Historical estimates of the melt rate and extent of the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) are poorly constrained, due both to incomplete understanding of relevant ice dynamics and the magnitude of forcing acting upon the ice sheet (e.g., Alley et al. 2010). Previous assessments of the Marine Isotope Stage 11 (MIS-11) interglacial period have determined it was likely one of the warmest and longest interglacial periods of the past 800 kyr, leading to melt of at least half the present-day volume of the Greenland ice sheet (Robinson et al. 2017). An enhanced Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is commonly cited as sustaining the anomalous warmth across the North Atlantic and Greenland (e.g., Rachmayani et al. 2017), but little is known about potential atmospheric contributions. Paleorecords from this period are sparse, and detailed climate modelling studies of this period have been heretofore very limited. The climatic conditions over Greenland and the North Atlantic region, and how they may have contributed to the melt of the GrIS during MIS-11, are therefore not well understood. By utilizing climate simulations with the Community Earth System Model (CESM), our study indicates that changes in atmospheric eddy behavior, including eddy fluxes of heat and precipitation, made significant contributions to the negative mass balance conditions over the GrIS during the MIS-11 interglacial. Thus, accounting for the effects of atmospheric feedbacks in a warmer-than-present climate is a necessary component for future analyses attempting to better constrain the extent and rate of melt of the GrIS.

How to cite: Crow, B., Prange, M., and Schulz, M.: On the role of atmospheric feedbacks in sustaining the anomalous warmth of the MIS-11 interglacial, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7316, 2021.

The interaction between large-scale tropical circulations and moist convection has been the focus of a number of studies. However, projections of how the large-scale tropical circulation may change under global warming remain uncertain because our understanding of this interaction is still limited.

Here, we use a cloud-resolving model (CRM) coupled with a supra-domain scale (SDS) parameterisation of the large-scale circulation to investigate how tropical circulations driven by sea-surface temperature (SST) gradients change in a future warmer climate. Two popular SDS parameterisation schemes are compared; the weak temperature gradient approximation and the damped-gravity-wave approximation. In both cases, the large-scale vertical velocity is related to the deviation of the simulated density profile from a reference profile taken from the same model run to radiative-convective equilibrium.

We examine how the large-scale vertical velocity profile varies with surface temperature for fixed background profile (relative SST) as well as how it varies with the surface temperature of the reference profile (background SST). The domain mean vertical velocity appears to be very top-heavy with the maximum vertical velocity becoming stronger at warmer surface temperatures. The results are understood using a simple model for the thermodynamic structure of a convecting atmosphere based on an entraining plume. The model uses a fixed entrainment rate and the relative humidity from the cloud-resolving model to predict a temperature profile. The vertical velocities calculated from these predicted temperature profiles is similar to the vertical velocity structures and their behaviour in a warmer climate that we see in the CRM simulations. The results provide insight into large scale vertical velocity structures simulated by SDS parameterisation schemes, providing a stepping stone to understanding the factors driving changes to the large-scale tropical circulation in a future warmer climate.

How to cite: Neogi, S. and Singh, M.: Understanding changes in tropical circulations in a future warmer climate using a cloud-resolving model and a conceptual model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1859, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1859, 2021.

EGU21-11171 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

The interannual variability of the tropical divergence tilt

Pablo Zurita-Gotor

The large-scale divergence field tilts eastward with latitude moving away from its near-equatorial maximum in the summer hemisphere. This tilt, observed for all hemispheres and seasons, is also apparent in a hierarchy of models of varying complexity, including the simple Gill model. Previous theoretical work has shown that the divergence tilt determines the sign of the divergent momentum flux in the deep tropics, suggesting a possible connection to wave propagation.

In this presentation,  we show that changes in the divergence tilt are one of two primary drivers of the interannual eddy momentum flux variability in the tropics. We also show that interannual changes in the divergence tilt are strongly correlated with the West Pacific Oscillation, with an associated large extratropical impact. The dynamical mechanisms behind this association are also discussed.

How to cite: Zurita-Gotor, P.: The interannual variability of the tropical divergence tilt, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11171, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11171, 2021.

Considerations based on atmospheric energetics and aqua-planet model simulations link the latitudinal position of the global intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) to atmospheric cross-equatorial energy transport—a greater southward transport corresponds to a more northerly position of the ITCZ. This study, rather than concentrating of the zonally-averaged ITCZ, focuses on the tropical Pacific and looks separately at precipitation in the northern and southern hemispheres. Using numerical experiments, we show that in the tropical Pacific the response of the fully coupled ocean-atmosphere system to a hemispherically asymmetric thermal forcing, modulating atmospheric cross-equatorial energy transport, involves an interplay between the ITCZ and its counterpart in the South Pacific—the Southern Pacific convergence zone (SPCZ). This interplay leads to interhemispheric seesaw changes in tropical precipitation, such that the latitudinal position of each rain band remains largely fixed, but their intensities follow a robust inverse relationship. The seesaw behavior is also evident in the past and future coupled climate simulations of the Climate Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5). We further show that the tropical Pacific precipitation response to thermal forcing is qualitatively different between the aquaplanet (without ocean heat transport), slab-ocean (with climatological ocean heat transport represented by a “Q-flux”) and fully-coupled model configurations. Specifically, the induced changes in the ITCZ latitudinal position successively decrease, while the seesaw precipitation intensity response becomes more prominent, from the aqua-planet to the slab-ocean to the fully-coupled configuration. The ITCZ/SPCZ seesaw can explain a precipitation dipole pattern observed in paleoclimate without invoking a too strong climate forcing and is relevant to future projections of tropical precipitation.

How to cite: Fedorov, A. and Zhao, B.: The seesaw response of the Intertropical and South Pacific convergence zones to hemispherically asymmetric thermal forcing, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1428, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1428, 2021.

EGU21-2345 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Influence of the representation of convection on the mid-Holocene West African Monsoon

Leonore Jungandreas, Cathy Hohenegger, and Martin Claussen

Global climate models have difficulties to simulate the northward extension of the monsoonal precipitation over north Africa during the mid-Holocene as revealed by proxy data. A common feature of these models is that they usually operate on too coarse grids to explicitly resolve convection, but convection is the most essential mechanism leading to precipitation in the west African monsoon region. Here, we investigate how the representation of tropical deep convection in the ICON climate model affects the meridional distribution of monsoonal precipitation during the mid-Holocene, by comparing regional simulations of the summer monsoon season (July to September, JAS) with parameterized (40km-P) and explicitly resolved convection (5km-E). 
The spatial distribution and intensity of precipitation, are more realistic in the explicitly resolved convection simulations than in the simulations with parameterized convection.
However, in the JAS-mean the 40km-P simulation produces more precipitation and extents further north than the 5km-E simulation, especially between 12° N and 17° N. The higher precipitation rates in the 40km-P simulation are consistent with a stronger monsoonal circulation over land. 
Furthermore, the atmosphere in the 40km-P simulation is less stably stratified and notably moister. The differences in atmospheric water vapor are the result of substantial differences in the probability distribution function of precipitation and its resulting interactions with the land surface. The parametrization of convection produces light and large-scale precipitation, keeping the soils moist and supporting the development of convection. 
In contrast, less frequent but locally intense precipitation events lead to high amounts of runoff in explicitly resolved convection simulations. The stronger runoff inhibits the moistening of the soil during the monsoon season and limits the amount of water available to evaporation. 

How to cite: Jungandreas, L., Hohenegger, C., and Claussen, M.: Influence of the representation of convection on the mid-Holocene West African Monsoon, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2345, 2021.

EGU21-2172 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Understanding the dynamic of poleward shifting of atmospheric and oceanic circulation using aqua-planet model simulations​

Hu Yang, Jian Lu, Xiaoxu Shi, Qiang Wang, and Gerrit Lohmann

Growing evidence suggests that the oceanic and atmospheric circulation experiences a systematic poleward shift under climate change. However, due to the complexity of climate system, such as, the coupling between the ocean and the atmosphere, natural climate variability and land-sea distribution, the dynamical mechanism of such shift is still not fully understood. Here, using an idealized partially coupled ocean and atmosphere aqua-planet model, we explore the mechanism of the shifting oceanic and atmospheric circulation. We find that, in contrast to the rising GHG concentration, the subtropical ocean warming plays a dominant role in driving the shift in the circulation system. More specifically, due to background ocean dynamics, a relatively faster warming over the subtropical ocean drives a poleward shift in the atmospheric circulation. The shift in the atmospheric circulation in turn drives a shift in the oceanic circulation. Our simulations, despite being idealized, capture the main features of observed climate changes, for example, the enhanced subtropical ocean warming, poleward shift of the patterns of near-surface wind, sea level pressure, cloud, precipitation, storm tracks and large-scale ocean circulation, implying that global warming not only raises the temperature, but also systematically shifts the climate zones.​

How to cite: Yang, H., Lu, J., Shi, X., Wang, Q., and Lohmann, G.: Understanding the dynamic of poleward shifting of atmospheric and oceanic circulation using aqua-planet model simulations​, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2172, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2172, 2021.

EGU21-11986 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

Quantitative study of atmospheric rivers in the Indian subcontinent

Rosa V. Lyngwa and Munir Ahmad Nayak

The principal sources of freshwater in India include precipitation, glaciers, and snowmelt. The former dominates the country’s annual river water contribution, which is important for agriculture and livelihood of the residents, and the latter two sources contribute at a much lower fraction in comparison to precipitation to even meet the minimum requirements. However, there is a large degree of variations in their spatio-temporal distribution throughout the country. India receives a major portion of its annual precipitation during the boreal summer (June – September). The well-known but relatively unexplored contributors to precipitation in India are atmospheric rivers (ARs). This study aims to understand the main climatological and dynamical differences between the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) and ARs in boreal summer. Zonal (‘u’) and meridional (‘v’) wind speeds, integrated water vapor transport (IVT), and integrated water vapor (IWV) are used to identify distinct features in ARs in the Indian sub-continent that can be used to distinguish them from ISM. The major differences between the two synoptic features were found in the increased zonal wind speed and moisture inputs during AR events, which often result in extreme precipitation and floods. Besides understanding them, the identification of ARs in this region and accounting for their existential contribution to moisture during peak rainfall seasons is critical for further hydrological impacts studies.

How to cite: V. Lyngwa, R. and Ahmad Nayak, M.: Quantitative study of atmospheric rivers in the Indian subcontinent, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11986, 2021.

EGU21-5983 | vPICO presentations | CL4.19

The dynamics of Holocene monsoon based on meteoric 10Be at Kunlun Pass on the northeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

Peng Chen, Zhongbo Yu, Markus Czymzik, Ala Aldahan, Jinguo Wang, Peng Yi, Göran Possnert, Xuegao Chen, Minjie Zheng, Huijun Jin, Dongliang Luo, and Qingbai Wu

Multiple proxy records have been used for the understanding of environmental and climate changes during the Holocene. For the first time, we here measure meteoric 10Be isotope of sediments from a drill core collected at the Kunlun Pass (KP) on the northeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (NETP) to investigate mositure and atmospheric circulation changes during the Holocene. The 10Be flux suggests relative low levels in the Early Holocene, followed by a sharp increase to high values at around 4 ka BP (4 ka BP = 4000 years before present). Afterwards, the 10Be flux remains on a high level during the Late Holocene, but decreases slightly towards today. These 10Be deposition patterns are compared to moisture changes in regions dominated by the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM), East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM), and the Westerlies. Different from the gradual changes in monsoon patterns, the 10Be data reveal low levels during the Early Holocene until ~4 ka BP when an obvious increase was indicated and a relative high level continues to this day, which is relatively more in agreement with patterns of the Westerlies. This finding provides a new evidence for a shift in the dominant pattern of atmospheric circulation at the KP region from a more monsoonal one to one dominated by the Westerlies. Our results improve the understanding of non-stationary interactions and spatial relevance of the EASM, the ISM and the Westerlies on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

How to cite: Chen, P., Yu, Z., Czymzik, M., Aldahan, A., Wang, J., Yi, P., Possnert, G., Chen, X., Zheng, M., Jin, H., Luo, D., and Wu, Q.: The dynamics of Holocene monsoon based on meteoric 10Be at Kunlun Pass on the northeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5983, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5983, 2021.

CL4.25 – Polar regions – climate, oceanography, tectonics, and geohazards

EGU21-5190 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Coupled evolution of tectonic, ocean circulations, and depositional regime in the southeastern Amundsen Basin

Estella Weigelt, Christoph Gaedicke, and Wilfried Jokat

The Lomonosov Ridge (LR) and Fram Strait (FR) represent prominent morphologic features in the Arctic Ocean. Their tectonic evolution control ocean circulation, sedimentation environment, glacial processes and ecosystem through time. We present findings of a 300 km long seismic transect from the Gakkel Deep through the southeastern Amundsen Basin (AB), and onto the LR. The data image an up to 3 km thick sedimentary sequence that can be subdivided into six major seismic units.

The two lower units AB-1 and AB-2 consist of syn-rift sediments of Paleocene to early Eocene age likely eroded off the Barents-Kara and Laptev Sea shelves, and the subsiding LR.

AB-2 includes the time interval of the “Azolla event,” which is regarded as an era of a warm Arctic Ocean punctuated by episodic incursions of fresh water. The connection to North Atlantic waters via the Fram Strait was not yet established, and anoxic conditions prevailed in the young, still isolated Eurasian Basin. Also, the LR still was above or close to sea level and posed an obstacle for water exchange between the Eurasian and Amerasian basins.

The top of AB-2 onlaps the acoustic basement at magnetic anomaly C21o (∼47.3 Ma). Its contact with unit AB-3 above is marked by a striking loss in reflection amplitudes. This prominent interface can be traced through the AB, indicating widespread changes in tectonic and deposition conditions in the Arctic Ocean since the middle Eocene. For younger crust the depth of acoustic basement rises significantly, as well as the deformation of the surface. Both are probably linked to a reorganization of tectonic plates accompanied by a significant decrease in spreading rates.

Units AB-3 and AB-4 indicate the accumulation of sediments between the middle Eocene and the earliest Miocene. Erosional, channel-like interruptions indicate these layers to reflect the stage when Fram Strait opened and continuously deepened. Incursions of water masses from the North Atlantic probably led to first bottom currents and produced erosion, slumping, and subsequent mixing of deposits.

The upper units AB-5 to AB-6 show reflection characteristics and thicknesses similar all over the Arctic Ocean indicating that basin-wide pelagic sedimentation prevailed at least since late Oligocene. Drift bodies, sediment waves, and erosional structures indicate the onset of a modern ocean circulation system and bottom current activity in the early Miocene in the Amundsen Basin. At that time, the FR was developed widely, and also the LR no longer posed an obstacle between the Amerasia and Eurasia Basins. Lastly, unit AB-6 indicates pronounced variations in the sedimentary layers, and is associated with the onset of glacio-marine deposition since the Pliocene (5.3 Ma).

How to cite: Weigelt, E., Gaedicke, C., and Jokat, W.: Coupled evolution of tectonic, ocean circulations, and depositional regime in the southeastern Amundsen Basin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5190, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5190, 2021.

EGU21-141 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Sediment drifts at the eastern Kerguelen Plateau: Achives of climate and circulation development

Gabriele Uenzelmann-Neben, Matthias Schneider, Thomas Westerhold, and Eleen Zirks

The Kerguelen Plateau, southern Indian Ocean rises up 2000 m above the surrounding seafloor and hence forms an obstacle for the flow of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) and the Antarctic Bottomwater (AABW). The ACC is strongly deviated in its flow towards the north. A branch of the AABW flows northwards along the eastern flank of the plateau and in its path is steered by several basement highs and William’s Ridge. Seismic data collected during RV Sonne cruise SO272 image sediment drifts shaped in the Labuan Basin, which document onset and variabilities in pathway and intensity of this AABW branch in relation to the development of the Antarctic ice sheet and tectonic processes, e.g., the opening of the Tasman gateway. The eastern flank of the Kerguelen shows strong erosion of the post-mid Eocene sequences. In places, the Paleocene/early Eocene sequences are also affected by thinning and erosion. A moatcan be observed along the Kerguelen Plateau flank indicating the flowpath of the north setting AAWB branch. Sediment drifts and sediment waves are formed east of the moat. Similar features are observed at the inner, western flank of William’s Ridge thus outlining the recirculation of the AABW branch in the Labuan Basin. The chronological and spatial will be reconstructed via the analysis of those sedimentary structures to provide constraints on climate and ocean circulation variability.

How to cite: Uenzelmann-Neben, G., Schneider, M., Westerhold, T., and Zirks, E.: Sediment drifts at the eastern Kerguelen Plateau: Achives of climate and circulation development, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-141, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-141, 2021.

Formation of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) plays an essential role within Meridional Overturning Circulation and is widely accepted to be the engine of global Thermohaline Circulation (THC), which is sensitive to climate changes. Studying paleo conditions and changes of AABW distribution during warm and cold periods is fundamental to gain knowledge about its interaction and response to climate changes, which helps to understand recent and future changes of THC due to global warming.

West of Prydz Bay, along MacRobertson Land Shelf area, a recent production of dense shelf water in the Cape Darnley Polynya and outflow as so-called Cape Darnley Bottom Water (CDBW) along the Wild Canyon has been recognized. CDBW contributes around 6-13% to the total circumpolar AABW. In order to understand the paleo conditions of AABW it is necessary to investigate the paleo-evolution of CDBW. To do this, we have studied the formation history of a 200 km long sediment drift (Darnley Drift herein) at the western flank of the Wild Canyon. We utilized more than 13.000 km of multi-channel seismic reflection data and lithological Data of ODP Site 1165.  

We characterized Darnley Drift to be a mixed turbiditic-contourite drift formed by an interplay of downslope and along-slope processes. During the Oligocene, turbiditic outflow dominated along the later formed Wild Canyon. An onset of CDBW can be inferred during the early Miocene, forming an asymmetric channel-levee system along the Wild Canyon. After the mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum a major climate change occurred, resulting in a strong intensification of bottom currents and major growth of the drift with simultaneous areas of non-deposition and erosion. This was followed by a sharp reduction of sedimentation rates. Since the late Miocene the growth of Darnley Drift is further dominated by contourite bottom currents.

How to cite: Nielsen, R. and Uenzelmann-Neben, G.: Cenozoic reconstruction of Cape Darnley Bottom Water paleo-distribution imprinted in the drift formation history off MacRobertson Land Shelf, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8061, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8061, 2021.

EGU21-10699 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

3D geological modelling of the South Orkney Microcontinent (southern Scotia Arc, Antarctica) from seismic and potential field data

Cecilia Morales-Ocaña, Fernando Bohoyo, Carlota Escutia, Carlos Marín-Lechado, María Druet, Carmen Rey-Moral, and Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar

The South Orkney Microcontinent (SOM) is located in the central sector of the South Scotia Arc, at the Weddell Sea northern edge. The SOM is the largest continental block in the southern Scotia Arc with a surface of more than 70.000 km2. Its current location is the result of the continental break-up from the Antarctic Peninsula related to the Powell Basin opening, considered one of the first steps in the formation of the Drake Passage during the Eocene-Oligocene.

In this work we present a 3D geological model of the SOM built with Geomodeller® using free-air gravity anomaly data from Topex and magnetic data from WDMAM. To obtain a reliable result, some constrains have been taken into account: (1) GEBCO data are used to establish the bathymetric level, (2) basement depth and geometry is calculated from multi-channel seismic profiles over the study area obtained from the Seismic Data Library System (SDLS), and (3) the analytic signal of total field magnetic anomalies has been used to limit the extension of the bodies that cause the PMA (Pacific Margin Anomaly).

All these data, together with additional geological and geophysical interpretation, have allowed to build the 3D model. The characterization of the sedimentary basins shape, the deep crust structure and Moho geometry, the volume of the magnetic bodies and the nature and geometry of the SOM margins will provide a better understanding of the complex SOM structure resulting from different tectonic phases since the Mesozoic and related to the Scotia-Drake opening.

The preliminary result shows a good fit between the observed and calculated gravimetric anomaly. We are currently working on the gravimetric inversion to obtain an optimal adjustment.

How to cite: Morales-Ocaña, C., Bohoyo, F., Escutia, C., Marín-Lechado, C., Druet, M., Rey-Moral, C., and Galindo-Zaldívar, J.: 3D geological modelling of the South Orkney Microcontinent (southern Scotia Arc, Antarctica) from seismic and potential field data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10699, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10699, 2021.

EGU21-9503 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Southern high latitude vegetation change across the Drake Passage region linked to prolonged intervals of climate cooling during the early Oligocene

Nick Thompson, Ulrich Salzmann, Adrián López Quirós, Carlota Escutia, Peter Bijl, Frida Hoem, Johan Etourneau, Marie-Alexandrine Sicre, Sabine Roignant, and Michael Amoo

The possible causes of the onset of Antarctic glaciation around the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (EOT), approximately 34 million years ago (~34Ma), are poorly understood. Uncertainties particularly remain over the role of the Drake Passage opening on the development of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), and how this affected both marine and terrestrial environments. A major obstacle in understanding the role of the opening Drake Passage and ACC in Cenozoic climate changes has been the lack of continuous records spanning the EOT from the region. Here we present new palynomorph data from ODP Leg 113 Site 696 Hole B, recording changes in terrestrial environments and paleoclimate across the EOT. The sporomorph assemblage reveals the presence of Nothofagus-dominated forests with secondary Podocarpaceae and an understory of angiosperms and cryptogams growing across much of the Northern Antarctic Peninsula and South Orkney Microcontinent during the late Eocene (~37.60-34.95 Ma). Palaeoclimate reconstructions show that these forests grew under wet temperate conditions, with mean annual temperature and precipitation around 12°C and 1650mm, respectively. Today, similar temperate Nothofagus-dominated mixed-podocarp forests occur in the temperate Valdivian region of southern Chile. At the onset of the EOT, the palynomorph assemblage indicates an unusual expansion of gymnosperms and cryptogams, accompanied by a rapid increase in taxa diversity between ca. 34 and 32 Ma. Sporomorph based climate reconstructions do not provide evidence for an abrupt cooling at the EOT but reveal the onset of prolonged cooling phases throughout the early Oligocene. A contemporaneous increase in reworked Mesozoic sporomorphs at the EOT is likely to be linked to frequent glacial advances from the Antarctic Peninsula and South Orkney Microcontinent, although iceberg-rafted debris from Antarctica cannot be ruled out. We conclude that climate instability and glacial related disturbance at the onset of the EOT facilitated the suppression of Nothofagus and the expansion of a more diverse vegetation with many pioneer taxa that were able to quickly colonise during glacial retreat cycles.

How to cite: Thompson, N., Salzmann, U., López Quirós, A., Escutia, C., Bijl, P., Hoem, F., Etourneau, J., Sicre, M.-A., Roignant, S., and Amoo, M.: Southern high latitude vegetation change across the Drake Passage region linked to prolonged intervals of climate cooling during the early Oligocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9503, 2021.

EGU21-11103 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Oligocene sea-surface temperature gradients in the Southern Ocean related to Tasmanian Gateway widening: New TEX86 paleothermometry, dinoflagellate cyst data and climate model comparisons

Frida Hoem, Suning Hou, Matthew Huber, Francesca Sangiorgi, Henk Brinkhuis, and Peter Bijl

The opening of the Tasmanian Gateway during the Eocene and further deepening in the Oligocene is hypothesized to have reorganized ocean currents, preconditioning the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) to evolve into place. However, fundamental questions still remain on the past Southern Ocean structure. We here present reconstructions of latitudinal temperature gradients and the position of ocean frontal systems in the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean during the Oligocene. We generated new sea surface temperature (SST) and dinoflagellate cyst data from the West Tasman margin, ODP Site 1168. We compare these with other records around the Tasmanian Gateway, and with climate model simulations to analyze the paleoceanographic evolution during the Oligocene. The novel organic biomarker TEX86- SSTs from ODP Site 1168, range between 19.6 – 27.9°C (± 5.2°C, using the linear calibration by Kim et al., 2010), supported by temperate and open ocean dinoflagellate cyst assemblages. The data compilation, including existing TEX86-based SSTs from ODP Site 1172 in the Southwest Pacific Ocean, DSDP Site 274 offshore Cape Adare, DSDP Site 269 and IODP Site U1356 offshore the Wilkes Land Margin and terrestrial temperature proxy records from the Cape Roberts Project (CRP) on the Ross Sea continental shelf, show synchronous variability in temperature evolution between Antarctic and Australian sectors of the Southern Ocean. The SST gradients are around 10°C latitudinally across the Tasmanian Gateway throughout the early Oligocene, and increasing in the Late Oligocene. This increase can be explained by polar amplification/cooling, tectonic drift, strengthening of atmospheric currents and ocean currents. We suggest that the progressive cooling of Antarctica and the absence of mid-latitude cooling strengthened the westerly winds, which in turn could drive an intensification of the ACC and strengthening of Southern Ocean frontal systems.

How to cite: Hoem, F., Hou, S., Huber, M., Sangiorgi, F., Brinkhuis, H., and Bijl, P.: Oligocene sea-surface temperature gradients in the Southern Ocean related to Tasmanian Gateway widening: New TEX86 paleothermometry, dinoflagellate cyst data and climate model comparisons, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11103, 2021.

EGU21-9831 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

New palynological data from the East Tasman Plateau (ODP Site 1172) indicate rapid earliest Oligocene warming.

Michael Amoo, Ulrich Salzmann, Peter K. Bijl, and Nick Thompson

Considered as one of the most significant climate reorganisations of the Cenozoic period, the Eocene-Oligocene (E/O) Transition (ca. 33.9-33.5 Ma) is characterised by global cooling coupled with glacial advance on Antarctica. Combined micropalaeontological (diatom and dinoflagellate) and sedimentological evidence hint of regional reorganisation of ocean currents around Antarctica, in association with the Eocene-Oligocene transition. The late Eocene to early Oligocene deepening of the Tasman Gateway resulted in the flow of warm surface waters from the Australo-Antarctic gulf into the southwestern Pacific Ocean.  However, the extent and effect of these changes in ocean circulation on regional terrestrial climate and vegetation across the E/O Transition is not readily known. Here, we present new well-dated, high resolution palynological (sporomorph) data from the East Tasman Plateau (ODP Site 1172) to reconstruct climate and vegetation dynamics from the late Eocene through to the early Oligocene. Results from our sporomorph data point to four vegetation communities occupying Tasmania under different precipitation and temperature regimes: (i) Paratropical rainforest along the coastlines and temperate rainforests at higher altitude of the hinterlands from 37.97-37.52 Ma; (ii) cool temperate forest expanding into areas previously occupied by the paratropical forests between 37.306-35.60 Ma; (iii) a complex mix of paratropical associations coexisting with frost-tolerant taxa, followed by a period of relative stability shown in the dominance of cold-temperate taxa from 35.50-33.36 Ma; (iv) a warm temperate forest present in the early Oligocene (33.25-33.06 Ma). Our sporomorph record showed a general cooling trend from the latest-middle Eocene to the late Eocene (37.97-35.60 Ma), fluctuations between warm and cold climates (35.50 – 34.19 Ma), a period of relative stable cooling across the E/O transition (33.94-33.5 Ma), and a rather unusual rapid warming right after the E/O transition (earliest Oligocene; 33.36 - 33.06 Ma). Our quantitative estimates of terrestrial temperature change and palaeoecological reconstructions show a close link with previously published dinoflagellate cyst data from this same study site, suggesting a possible vegetation and climate response to tectonic changes (most likely the tectonic opening and deepening of the Tasman Gateway ca. 35.5 Ma) and relative short-term regional reorganisation of ocean currents.

Keywords: Antarctica, Eocene-Oligocene Transition, sporomorph, temperate rainforest, Tasman Gateway

How to cite: Amoo, M., Salzmann, U., Bijl, P. K., and Thompson, N.: New palynological data from the East Tasman Plateau (ODP Site 1172) indicate rapid earliest Oligocene warming., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9831, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9831, 2021.

EGU21-3009 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Timing, frequency and nature of sedimentary processes operating on the eastern Ross Sea continental slope during the Pleistocene- a record from IODP Expedition 374

Maxine King, Jenny Gales, Jan Sverre Laberg, Robert McKay, Laura De Santis, Denise Kulhanek, Phillip Hosegood, Antony Morris, Michele Rebesco, and IODP Expedition 374 Scientists

The repeated proximity of West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) ice to the Ross Sea continental shelf break has been inferred to directly influence sedimentary processes occurring on the continental slope. Sediment delivery to the shelf edge by grounded ice sheets during past glacials may have influenced turbidity current and debris flow activity, thus the records of these processes can be used to study the past history of the WAIS. However, the continental slope record may also be affected by density-driven or geostrophic oceanic bottom currents, therefore additionally providing an archive on their history and interplay with depositional mechanisms that are driven by ice sheets. Here, we investigate the upper 120.94m of one sediment core (length: 208.58mbsf) from Hole U1525A collected by International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 374 in 2018. Hole U1525A is located on the south-western levee of the Hillary Canyon (Ross Sea, Antarctica) and the depositional lobe of the nearby trough-mouth fan. Using core descriptions, grain size analysis, and physical properties datasets, we develop a lithofacies scheme that allows construction of a detailed depositional model and environmental history of past ice sheet-ocean interaction at the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf break/slope for the past 2.4 Ma. The earliest Pleistocene interval (2.4-1.35 Ma) is interpreted as a largely hemipelagic environment dominated by ice-rafting and reworking/deposition by relatively persistent bottom current activity. Microfossil barren, finely interlaminated sediments are interpreted as contourites deposited under the presence of multi-year sea-ice. During the latter part of the early Pleistocene (1.35-0.8 Ma), bottom current activity was weaker and turbiditic processes more common, likely related to the increased proximity of grounded ice at the shelf edge. Much of the fine-grained sediments were probably deposited via gravitational settlement from turbid plumes, and a sustained nepheloid layer. The thickest interval of turbidite interlamination occurs after ~1 Ma, following the onset of the “Mid-Pleistocene Transition” (MPT), interpreted as a time when most terrestrial ice sheets increased in size and glacial periods were longer and more extreme. Sedimentation in the mid-late Pleistocene (< ~0.8 Ma) was dominated by glacigenic debris flow deposition, as the trough mouth fan that dominates the eastern Ross Sea continental shelf prograded and expanded over the site. More frequent and longer-lasting fully-extended glacial conditions allowed the continued progradation of the trough-mouth fan across the core site. These findings will help to improve estimations of WAIS ice extent in future Ross Sea shelf-based modelling studies, and provide a basis for more detailed analysis of the formation and growth of the WAIS under distinct oceanographic conditions.

How to cite: King, M., Gales, J., Laberg, J. S., McKay, R., De Santis, L., Kulhanek, D., Hosegood, P., Morris, A., Rebesco, M., and Expedition 374 Scientists, I.: Timing, frequency and nature of sedimentary processes operating on the eastern Ross Sea continental slope during the Pleistocene- a record from IODP Expedition 374, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3009, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3009, 2021.

EGU21-4719 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Tracking ice-sheet dynamics by detrital feldspar Pb-isotope and 87Rb/87Sr dating during the Middle Miocene Climatic Transition, Weddell Sea, Antarctica

Roland Neofitu, Chris Mark, Suzanne O'Connell, Samuel Kelley, Delia Rösel, Thomas Zack, and J. Stephen Daly

Antarctic ice-sheet instability is recorded by ice-rafted debris (IRD) in mid- to high-latitude marine sediment, especially throughout climate transitions. The middle Miocene climatic transition (MMCT), 14.2 to 13.8 Ma, which marks the end of a significant warm period during the mid-Miocene, saw a rapid cooling of ca. 6-7 °C in the high-latitude Southern Ocean. This climatic shift was also accompanied by a global δ18O excursion of ca. 1‰, indicating a time of global cooling and significant Antarctic ice expansion (Shevenell et al., 2004). The MMCT is recorded by numerous IRD-rich sediment horizons in deep-sea sediment cores around the Antarctic margin, reflecting iceberg calving during times of ice-sheet instability. Resolving the locations of iceberg calving sites by detrital provenance analysis during the MMCT will be an important tool for forecasting effects of anthropogenic climate change.

Here we present results of a multi-proxy provenance study by using K- and plagioclase feldspar, selected due to their relative abundance in clastic sediment, and tendency to incorporate Rb (Kfs only), Pb, and Sr at analytically useful concentrations, thus enabling source-terrane fingerprinting. While Pb-isotope fingerprinting is an established method for provenance analysis of glaciogenic sediment (Flowerdew et al., 2012), combining in-situ Sr-isotope fingerprinting with 87Rb/87Sr dating is a novel approach. These techniques are applied to deep-sea core ODP113-694, which was recovered from the Weddell Sea; as this is located ca. 750 km from the continental rise, in 4671.3 m of water. This location is ideal, as it acts as a major iceberg graveyard making it a key IRD depocenter (Barker, Kennett et al., 1988). Within the core, several IRD layers were identified and analysed with preliminary depositional ages of 14 to 14.4 Ma.

We discuss the implications of our results in terms of location of active iceberg calving sites and further consider the viability of our multi-proxy provenance approach to the Antarctic offshore.

Barker, P.F., Kennett, J.P., et al., 1988, Proc. Init. Repts. (Pt. A): ODP, 113, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program).

Flowerdew, M.J., et al., 2012, Chemical Geology, v. 292–293, p. 88–102, doi: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2011.11.006.

Shevenell, A.E., et al., 2004, Science, v. 305, p. 1766-1770, doi: 10.1126/science.1100061.

How to cite: Neofitu, R., Mark, C., O'Connell, S., Kelley, S., Rösel, D., Zack, T., and Daly, J. S.: Tracking ice-sheet dynamics by detrital feldspar Pb-isotope and 87Rb/87Sr dating during the Middle Miocene Climatic Transition, Weddell Sea, Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4719, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4719, 2021.

EGU21-13136 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Sedimentary signature of past West Antarctic Ice Sheet and ocean dynamics from deep sea drill cores in the Amundsen Sea (IODP Expedition 379)

Delaney E. Robinson, Julia S. Wellner, Karsten Gohl, and Benedict T.I. Reinardy and the IODP Expedition 379 Scientists

Modern observations of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) show relatively warm ocean water causing negative changes in ice-sheet mass. The largest ice mass loss in the WAIS occurs in the Amundsen Sea region, where warm water flows onto the shelf and melts the marine-based ice shelves, a process with the potential to lead to full collapse of the WAIS. Geologic records from similar and warmer climate conditions than today are required to understand the role of changes affecting the Amundsen Sea drainage sector in steering past WAIS dynamics. International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 379 successfully recovered sediment drill cores from two sites on the continental rise in the Amundsen Sea, West Antarctica. Both sites are located on a large sediment drift that provides a continuous, long-term record of glacial history in a drainage basin that is fed exclusively by the WAIS. Sediments at both sites are associated with depositional processes related to glacial extent on the shelf. Repeated alternations of two major facies groups composed of dark-gray laminated silty clay and massive/bioturbated greenish-gray, clast-bearing mud are interpreted to represent cycles of glacial and interglacial periods. High-resolution sedimentological analyses define characteristics that vary within the two broad sedimentary facies, helping provide constraints on depositional processes of the sediments and controlling WAIS dynamics.

Detailed investigations were conducted on Miocene to Pliocene strata using grain size and shape analysis, combined with X-Ray Fluorescence data and computer tomography scans, as well as detailed thin section analysis. Laminated silty clay intervals contain consistently fine-grained sediments dominated by terrigenous components that were supplied by downslope transport during glacial periods. Massive/bioturbated muds with ice rafted debris (IRD) display variable grain size trends accompanied by changes in particular elemental ratios indicating increased supply of biogenic components and possibly reduced delivery of terrigenous detritus during interglacial periods. The boundaries between massive, interglacial facies and laminated, glacial facies are usually sharp; although occasionally, a more gradual interglacial-glacial transition is observed. Different sedimentation patterns suggest fluctuations in downslope transport and bottom current intensities that are connected to ice sheet extent on the West Antarctic continental shelf. Further analysis may reveal facies characteristics that vary with glacial-interglacial cycles and allow improved interpretation of past WAIS dynamics and Southern Ocean circulation.

How to cite: Robinson, D. E., Wellner, J. S., Gohl, K., and Reinardy, B. T. I. and the IODP Expedition 379 Scientists: Sedimentary signature of past West Antarctic Ice Sheet and ocean dynamics from deep sea drill cores in the Amundsen Sea (IODP Expedition 379), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13136, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13136, 2021.

EGU21-8688 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Miocene continental margin growth dominated by deposits from ocean currents – an example from offshore Norway

Stine Bjordal Olsen, Tom Arne Rydningen, Jan Sverre Laberg, Amando Putra Ersaid Lasabuda, and Stig-Morten Knutsen

The earliest Cenozoic evolution of the Mid-Norwegian and Lofoten-Vesterålen continental margin (~65-70o N) involved rifting, opening and finally seafloor spreading, initiating the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. These events resulted in large morphological and structural variations along the margin, creating accommodation space in a deep- to shallow-marine setting that allowed for accumulation of the Miocene sediments of the Kai- and Molo formations. The Cenozoic seismic stratigraphic correlation between the wide Mid-Norwegian and the narrow Lofoten-Vesterålen margin is poorly established. We therefore here analyze a large database of seismic data and exploration wellbores to give new insights on the sedimentary processes and paleo-environments during the Miocene evolution of this complex continental margin segment.

Steeply dipping clinoforms of the Molo Formation testify to a Miocene coastal outbuilding on the eastern part of the northern Mid-Norwegian margin. West of this, elongated sediment accumulations oriented in an along-slope SSW-NNE direction characterize the palaeo-slope. These are up to ~200 km long, between 40 and 110 km wide and up to ~520 m thick. An internal divergent reflection configuration characterize the elongated accumulations and they typically display a progressive upslope onlapping relationship onto an overall gently westward-dipping underlying morphology that includes domes, highs and ridges. Small incisions are frequently observed in association with the upslope onlap. These characteristics are altogether typical of contourites deposited from ocean currents. In the Vøring Basin, the internal seismic configuration can be described as consisting of low to moderate amplitude parallel-layered reflections, which are interpreted to represent a deep-water hemipelagic setting.

On the much narrower Lofoten-Vesterålen margin, parts of the Kai Formation show a seismic reflection configuration similar to what is observed on the northern Mid-Norwegian margin (e.g. elongated character, divergent internal reflections). These sediments are therefore also interpreted to be contouritic- and hemipelagic deposits. In contrast to the northern Mid-Norwegian contourites, the Lofoten-Vesterålen contourites are generally thinner, and they onlap onto an underlying steeply dipping continental slope, a slope which is also characterized by submarine canyons. Downslope of these, depocenters oriented perpendicular to the margin (i.e. slope-parallel), suggest influence of downslope processes through the canyons.

Our preliminary results show the presence of several contourite build-ups on the investigated margin, indicating the occurrence of a well-established ocean circulation with a persistent current direction along the Norwegian margin during deposition of the Kai Formation. The main source area for these sediments were likely south of the Mid-Norwegian margin. Coastal outbuilding in the Molo Formation and canyon-fed sediment input also testify to a sediment input from the east in the Miocene, and some of these were likely also re-distributed by ocean currents.

How to cite: Bjordal Olsen, S., Rydningen, T. A., Laberg, J. S., Lasabuda, A. P. E., and Knutsen, S.-M.: Miocene continental margin growth dominated by deposits from ocean currents – an example from offshore Norway, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8688, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8688, 2021.

EGU21-12617 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Depositional environments in the northern Barents Sea, from the last glacial to the present — preliminary results

Vårin Trælvik Eilertsen, Rydningen Tom Arne, Matthias Forwick, Monica Winsborrow, and Jan Sverre Laberg

The Eurasian Ice Sheet Complex was the world’s third largest ice mass during the last glacial maximum (LGM), and included the British, Fennoscandian and Svalbard–Barents Sea ice sheets. Of these three, the mostly marine-based Svalbard-Barents Sea Ice Sheet (SBIS) is the least well constrained in terms of ice sheet dynamics and deglacial retreat patterns. Improving the understanding of the behavior and decay of this marine paleo-ice sheet can provide knowledge that is relevant to understanding the future evolution of the marine terminating ice margins in Greenland and Antarctica, which are today undergoing rapid retreat and thinning.

We present high-resolution TOPAS sub-bottom profiler data and multi-proxy analyses of four sediment gravity cores (1.15 to 5.05 m long) retrieved from water depths of c. 250-550 m in a trough south of Kvitøya, NW Barents Sea. The data were collected during the Nansen Legacy (https:/arvenetternansen.com/) Paleo-cruise in 2018, with the aim of reconstructing the patterns and timing of deglaciation of the SBIS and postglacial environmental changes in the northern Barents Sea. The data show a succession of up to 10 m high and 400 m wide ridges, interpreted to be recessional push-moraines, representing small still-stands or re-advances of the ice front during its retreat in southwesterly direction. An up to 40 m high and 20 km long sedimentary wedge in the central and western part of the study area buries some of these moraines. This wedge is interpreted to be a grounding zone wedge representing a major still-stand or re-advance during the deglaciation.

The gravity cores are located distal to, on the distal slope and on top of the grounding zone wedge. A muddy diamict defines the lowermost unit in each core. It is interpreted to be primarily subglacial till. This till is covered by laminated mud, interpreted to represent sedimentation from meltwater plumes that emanated from the nearby ice margin. Massive marine mud containing scattered clasts (the clasts are interpreted to be ice rafted debris) define the uppermost unit in all cores. This is suggested to represent deposition from suspension settling and ice rafting in a glacier-distal environment at the end of the last glacial, as well as during modern conditions.

Radiocarbon dates (submitted for dating) will provide a minimum age for the formation of the grounding zone wedge and the recessional moraines in front of it. This will improve the chronology on the deglacial events forming these deposits and landforms. Together with detailed multi-proxy analyses of the sedimentary units, this will also provide new knowledge about the development from glacial conditions to a glacier-proximal and –distal, and an open marine environment from the last glacial to the present.

How to cite: Trælvik Eilertsen, V., Tom Arne, R., Forwick, M., Winsborrow, M., and Laberg, J. S.: Depositional environments in the northern Barents Sea, from the last glacial to the present — preliminary results, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12617, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12617, 2021.

EGU21-6763 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

The late Pleistocene and Holocene glaciation history of sub-Antarctic South Georgia

Nina-Marie Lešić, Katharina Streuff, Gerhard Kuhn, Gerhard Bohrmann, and Tilo von Dobeneck

The ice cap of the sub-Antarctic island South Georgia is influenced by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and is hence more sensitive to changing climate than the significantly larger and more isolated Antarctic ice sheets. Furthermore, the sediment deposits in fjords and glacially eroded troughs around the island have superbly archived glacier behavior, environmental and climatic changes since the late Pleistocene. This makes South Georgia an attractive target to study past climate variability in the Southern Hemisphere. Nevertheless, the ice sheet’s extents and dynamics during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR), and the Holocene deglaciation phase are still poorly understood. Although several studies on land and in marine near-shore areas of South Georgia have addressed this, only few studies are based on marine sediment cores from the continental shelf. In this study, we use ten gravity cores from three different troughs on the southern and northwestern shelf to further investigate the climatic and glaciological evolution of South Georgia during and since the LGM.

Multi-proxy sedimentological analyses carried out in this study include core logging, XRF geochemical profiling, XRD analyses on bulk sediment and clay fraction, measurements of physical properties, magnetic susceptibility, grain size distribution and shear strength. For the Drygalski Trough on the southern shelf, lithofacies description reveals the deposition of stratified, predominantly sandy diamicton and greenish-grey massive to laminated, sometimes bioturbated mud with variable amounts of clasts. First radiocarbon ages from benthic foraminifera constrain the deposition of the diamicton, interpreted as waterlain till, on the outer shelf to the LGM. Inferred linear sedimentation rates attest to low sediment input on the outer shelf during the LGM (34 cm/ka) and the Holocene (23-32 cm/ka). In contrast, a higher sedimentation rate (114 cm/ka) between 14.7 and 13.7 cal ka BP is likely associated with enhanced erosion due to a possible re-advance of South Georgia’s glaciers during the ACR’s colder and wetter climate. For island-proximal cores, sedimentation rates are generally higher than on the outer shelf with rates of 80-2300 cm/ka during the Mid- to Late Holocene. This stronger fluctuation of sedimentation rates is due to higher temporal resolution of the dated sediments compared to the outer shelf. Grain-size distribution on the outer shelf shows a gravel content of 1-28 wt% in the diamicton facies from the LGM and 1-5 wt% in a sediment interval dated to 16.8 cal ka BP. This sediment interval is also characterized by a high content of pebbles, likely reflecting an increased input of IRD. The overlying ACR and Holocene show a low gravel content of 0-0.7 wt%. The diamicton suggests that ice-proximal conditions prevailed on the outer shelf during the LGM and therefore supports the theory of a shelf-wide glaciation. The combination of a low-resolution sediment core from the outer shelf and island-proximal high-resolution sediment cores has the potential to give new insights into South Georgia’s climate history from the Late Pleistocene to the Late Holocene.

How to cite: Lešić, N.-M., Streuff, K., Kuhn, G., Bohrmann, G., and von Dobeneck, T.: The late Pleistocene and Holocene glaciation history of sub-Antarctic South Georgia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6763, 2021.

EGU21-11181 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Sedimentological characterization of coarse sediments within the deglaciation sequence in the east Antarctic Wilkes Land margin

Julia Gutierrez-Pastor, Carlota Escutia, Ursula Röhl, Ariadna Salabarnada, and Francisco Jimenez-Espejo

During the Holocene, 180 m of diatom ooze sediments were deposited in the Antarctic Wilkes Land margin continental shelf at site U1357A (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 318, Escutia et al., 2011). Holocene sediments are dominated by rhythmic laminated deposits above a poorly sorted gravelly siltstone diamicton from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). CT-scans reveal three events of gravel/sand/silt sediments interbedded within the laminated sediments and interpreted as ice rafted debris (IRD).  Two of these events (from 185,1 to 185,45 and 174, 8 to 175,37 meters below seafloor, mbsf) are characterized by dispersed large clasts (1-5cm) within a muddy matrix at the base, transitioning to the top to millimetre-size clasts that are either aligned with the dark and light laminae or dispersed. A third event (176,2 to 177,2 mbsf) is characterized by a structureless sediment sequence with high concentrations of dispersed clasts that are up to 1-2 cm size. We used ImageJ/Fiji software, to conduct a quantitative analysis of grains bigger than 1mm in CT Scan 3D images. Measured parameters include grain size (Feret length), grain orientation (Feret angle), circularity and roundness, among other. In addition, grey scale profiles have been created from the sediment CT-scan images as a density proxy. Quantitative data and density profiles have been used to aid the sedimentological characterization of the Holocene deglaciation section and to infer depositional environment and patterns of deglaciation.

Escutia, C., Brinkhuis, H., Klaus, A., and the Expedition 318 Scientists, Proc. IODP, 318: Site 1357. Tokyo (Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc.). doi:10.2204/​iodp.proc.318.105.2011

 

How to cite: Gutierrez-Pastor, J., Escutia, C., Röhl, U., Salabarnada, A., and Jimenez-Espejo, F.: Sedimentological characterization of coarse sediments within the deglaciation sequence in the east Antarctic Wilkes Land margin, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11181, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11181, 2021.

EGU21-10455 | vPICO presentations | CL4.25

Semi-automated quantification of Ice Rafted Debris in sediment archives with Computed Tomography.

Jan Magne Cederstrøm, Sunniva Rutledal, Eivind W. N. Støren, and Willem G. M. van der Bilt

Ice rafted debris (IRD) in marine sedimentary sequences provide critical information about the evolution of ice sheets. These include enigmatic phases of ice sheet instability like Heinrich events, Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles or Bond events. Higher sampling resolution and greater spatial coverage in IRD records can help gain a better understanding of paleoaclimate, and help predict the future behavior of ice sheets. However, creating high-resolution IRD-records from marine sediment cores is a manual time- and labor-intensive laboratory procedure. By allowing for rapid and non-destructive quantification of micrometer (µm) scale particles, Computed Tomography (CT) holds the potential to increase both resolution and the pace of analysis. We demonstrate the potential of this approach with results from both experimental results and application on conventionally analyzed records. By using basic image processing tools on CT-imagery of phantom-boxes (replicating marine sediment cores with IRD) we counted sand-particles (>150 µm) of different mineralogies ranging from 25-2000 particles/g. The CT-results proved to match the manual counts with a r2 of up to 0.99 and a P-value of 0.00. Further, when applying the method on segments of natural marine sediment cores with published IRD-records, we were able to reconstruct the same trends as continuous counts with a 5 times higher spatial resolution. In addition, this non-destructive method gave further information on the impact of bioturbation, grainsize distribution and the sedimentary structure of IRD-deposits. In conclusion, this work can help the field to gain an even better understanding of the behavior of ice sheets by optimizing the efficiency and spatial resolution of IRD-records, while at the same time gaining a better understanding on the processes affecting the IRD-deposits.

How to cite: Cederstrøm, J. M., Rutledal, S., Støren, E. W. N., and van der Bilt, W. G. M.: Semi-automated quantification of Ice Rafted Debris in sediment archives with Computed Tomography., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10455, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10455, 2021.

High spatial and temporal resolution oceanographic data from across the Arctic Ocean are essential to better constrain climate models. Ongoing satellite measurements and mooring and autonomous profiler data are valuable, but many regions and temporal periods are inadequately surveyed, particularly outside summer months.

Over-ice scientific research expeditions can address these deficiencies because they are cost-effective and can be utilised at almost any time and at any location to obtain high spatiotemporal resolution data; unique peer-reviewed findings from such expeditions are now being published. For example, recently examined data from the Makarov Basin, obtained in April, during the 2011 Catlin Arctic Survey (McCallum and Suara, 2020) shows a surface mixed layer extending to a depth of ~40 m and buoyancy frequencies exceeding 0.025 s−1, indicating very strong thermohaline stratification, probably due to spring ice melt.

A model for such expedition-based science might comprise: a sympathetic and supportive scientific community, government bureaucracies willing to support and enable more ‘risky’ ventures, and funding bodies, including private industry, who are willing to sponsor and support, relatively inexpensive, high quality polar science.

Future acceptance and utilisation of over-ice scientific research expeditions has the potential to enable the collection of otherwise unobtainable glaciological, oceanographical and meteorological data in poorly sampled spatiotemporal regimes to allow better constraining and development of regional and global climate models.

How to cite: McCallum, A. and Suara, K.: The value of expedition-based science for capturing otherwise unobtainable Arctic oceanographical data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1852, 2021.

CL4.27 – Aeolian dust: initiator, player, and recorder of environmental change

EGU21-1062 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27 | Highlight

Numerical simulations of anthropogenic dust

Siyu Chen

Approximately 90% of people worldwide breathe air that contains high concentrations of particulate matter (PM) pollution. Anthropogenic dust (AD), as a crucial component of PM, can be interpreted as dust emitted by modifying or disturbing soil particles through direct (e.g., construction and driving of vehicles) and indirect (e.g., wind erosion over agricultural land, grassland, dry lakes, etc.) human activities. The compositions and properties of AD are more complex and variable than those of natural dust (ND). Current studies on dust aerosols have mostly focused on ND emissions, transport, and climate effects. However, the quantitative knowledge of the sources, characteristics, and impacts of AD is inadequate.

To comprehensively reproduce the AD emissions process, both “indirect” and “direct” AD emission were constructed to simulate AD emissions originated from diverse kinds of source regions in the study. Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) retrievals were utilized as the constraint of AD simulations. Results showed that using both indirect and direct AD emission schemes show good performance on reproducing the spatio-temporal distributions of AD at the global scale. Compared with natural dust emissions, indirect AD emissions show an indistinctive seasonal variation, with seasonal differences generally less than 0.42 μg m−2 s−1. Among indirect AD emissions, pasturelands produce more AD particles emission into the atmosphere than croplands at approximately 0.28 μg m−2 s−1, contributing 75.9% of indirect AD emissions. The developing regions emit much higher direct AD emissions than those from developed regions. In addition, AD-induced surface radiative cooling of up to -10.0 W m-2 regionally, especially in the developing countries. The estimated global total premature mortality due to AD is 0.7 million deaths per year and is more severe in populous regions.

How to cite: Chen, S.: Numerical simulations of anthropogenic dust, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1062, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1062, 2021.

EGU21-439 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Summertime dust storms over the Arabian Peninsula and impacts on radiation and atmospheric circulation.

Diana Francis, Jean-Pierre Chaboureau, Narendra Nelli, Juan Cuesta, and Noor Alshamsi

This study investigates the underlying atmospheric dynamics associated with intense dust storms in summer 2018 over the Arabian Peninsula (AP); a major dust source at global scale. It reports, for the first time, on the formation of cyclone over the Empty Quarter Desert as important mechanism for intense dust storms over this source region. The dust direct and semi-direct radiative forcings are observed, for the first time over this source region, using high-resolution in-situ and CERES-SYN satellite observational data. The three-dimensional structure and evolution of the dust storms are inferred from state-of-the-art satellite products such as SEVIRI, AEROIASI and CALIPSO. The dynamics and thermodynamics of the boundary layer during this event are thoroughly analyzed using ERA5 reanalysis and ground based observations.

We found that a large dust storm by Shamal winds led up, through radiative forcing, to cyclone development over the Empty Quarter Desert, subsequent dust emissions, development of convective clouds and rain. The cyclogenesis over this region initiated a second intense dust storm which developed and impacted the AP for 3 consecutive days. The uplifted dust by the cyclone reached 5 km in altitude and altered the radiative budget at the surface, inducing both significant warming during night and cooling during day. The dust load uplifted by the cyclone was estimated by the mesoscale model Meso-NH to be in the order of 20 Tg, and the associated aerosol optical depth was higher than 3. The model simulates reasonably the radiative impact of the dust in the shortwave but highly underestimated its impact in the LW.

Our study stresses the importance of the dust radiative forcing in the longwave and that it should be accurately accounted for in models to properly represent the impact of dust on the Earth system especially near source areas. Missing the warming effect of dust aerosols would impact both the weather and air quality forecast, and the regional climate projections.

These results were published in November 2020 in the journal Atmospheric Research doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosres.2020.105364.

How to cite: Francis, D., Chaboureau, J.-P., Nelli, N., Cuesta, J., and Alshamsi, N.: Summertime dust storms over the Arabian Peninsula and impacts on radiation and atmospheric circulation., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-439, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-439, 2021.

EGU21-1113 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

The contribution of the former Aral Sea and other desiccating lakes to the prevalence of dust storms in Central Asia and the Middle East

Jamie Banks, Bernd Heinold, and Kerstin Schepanski

EGU21-1349 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Contribution of meteorological factors to AOD variability during the dusty season over Iran

Robabeh Yousefi, Fang Wang, Quansheng Ge, and Abdallah Shaheen

Atmospheric aerosols considered as one of the main concerns in the ongoing climate change. Meteorological changes have a significant role in the inter-decadal Aerosols variation. In this talk, long term (2000-2019) aerosol optical depth (AOD) and metrological factors data from the reanalysis-based Modern Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA-2) were used provide deep insight into the relationship between meteorological factors and AOD variability over Iran during the dusty season (MJJA: May, June, July, and August). Prior to regression analyses, Iran was divided into three parts based on the climatological conditions (west part: dusty area, north part: wetter, and center: dry area). Using a multiple linear regression model, AOD variability over Iran was significantly linked to sea level pressure and soil moisture. Winter surface temperatures and relative humidity are the main contributors to MJJA AOD variability over the western and northern parts.  AOD was not affected by precipitation. Our results suggested that climatic variations strongly affect the dust cycle, with a strong dependence on wintertime conditions in the region.

How to cite: Yousefi, R., Wang, F., Ge, Q., and Shaheen, A.: Contribution of meteorological factors to AOD variability during the dusty season over Iran, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1349, 2021.

EGU21-1810 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Dust storm frequency in relation to extreme droughts in arid regions of Iran

reza modarres and Poria Mohit Esfahani

Dust storms are frequent phenomenon in arid and semi arid regions of Iran which cover near 60 percent of the entire country in the center of Iran. Due to geographic and climatic conditions of prolonged dry conditions as well as poor land use management, dust storms occur in almost all seasons across the region. Drought is a major fator affecting the likelihood of dust storm occurrence across arid regions of Iran. We develop copula functions to investigate the effect of drought on dust storm frequency.The standardized precipitation Index (SPI) was caluclated and drought condition was defined based on SPI< -0.5. Dought severity and duration for each drought event were ca;culated and the number of dust days in each drought event ws also identified. The Archimedean copula families shoed that the probability of dust occurrence has a significant relationship to extreme drought conditions. The joint probability is then used to derive the joint return period of dust storms in relation to drought condition.

How to cite: modarres, R. and Mohit Esfahani, P.: Dust storm frequency in relation to extreme droughts in arid regions of Iran, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1810, 2021.

EGU21-2509 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Possible Explanation for Interannual Variations in Trans-Pacific Transport of East Asian Dust

Mingxing Wang, Yiran Peng, and Tianliang Zhao

In this study, we used the sandstorm data of 233 meteorological stations in northern China, conventional meteorological observation data and MODIS-NDVI data in the 40 years from 1980 to 2019 to analyze the spatio-temporal variation of sandstorms in northern China and its related meteorological effects in this century.

The results show that: 1) The average number of sandstorm days in northern China has been fluctuating and decreasing since the beginning of this century, and increasing from 2017 to 2019. Spring is the main season of dust storm, and the springtime proportion of sandstorm days decreases year by year. 2) In the 1980s and 1990s, sandstorms covered almost covered the whole northwest region; Since the beginning of this century, the range of sandstorm days in the whole Northwest China has shown an obvious decadal downward trend. The spatial pattern of sandstorm days in northern China has been shrinking and moving westward since 2000, and the dominant position of the Gobi Desert in the Asian dust source region has been decreasing year by year. The high sandstorm days were located in the Taklimakan Desert with the increasing trend of sandstorm days year by year. 3) The temporal and spatial variation of sandstorm days in northern China is closely related to the increase of vegetation cover with the greenness and wetness of the land surface, the decreases of average wind speed and gale days, and the significant increase of annual precipitation in northern China after 2000.

How to cite: Yang, J. and Zhao, T.: Temporal and spatial variations of sandstorm and the related meteorological influences over northern China in the 21st century, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14615, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14615, 2021.

EGU21-12649 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Recent dust variability over South Asia controlled by North Atlantic SST anomalies

Priyanka Banerjee, Sreedharan Krishnakumari Satheesh, and Krishnaswamy Krishna Moorthy

Several studies have associated high dust years over South Asia to warming of the central or eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean (El Nino conditions) and the resulting weakening of the summer monsoon. Using satellite aerosol data for 2001-2018, we show that there has been a departure from this relation since the second decade of the 21st century with the North Atlantic Ocean emerging as a major driver of interannual variability of dust over South Asia. This change in relation coincides with the end of the global warming hiatus and a shift towards persistent positive phase of the winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Positive phase of the NAO induces cold phase of the spring/summer North Atlantic sea surface temperature (SST) tripole pattern. We show here that high dust activity during 2011-2018 is associated with positive SST anomaly over the mid-latitude North Atlantic and negative SST anomaly over the sub-tropical North Atlantic: the two southern arms of the SST tripole pattern. Interestingly, the relation between NAO and these two southern arms of the SST tripole has undergone changes in recent years, which has impacted the South Asian monsoon. The result is general drying over South Asia and an increase in the strength of the dust-carrying northwesterlies. Simulations with the Community Earth System Model (CESM) shows that SST tripole-like anomalies recorded during 2011-2018 over the North Atlantic can generate mid-latitude wave train that weakens the South Asian monsoon circulation, leads to surface high pressure anomalies and increase in dust emission and transport over northwest India and Pakistan. Most of the increase in the dust load can be attributed to enhanced transport at 800 hPa pressure level during May-June, which can lead to ~40-50% increase in dust concentrations at this level.

How to cite: Banerjee, P., Satheesh, S. K., and Krishna Moorthy, K.: Recent dust variability over South Asia controlled by North Atlantic SST anomalies, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12649, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12649, 2021.

EGU21-11644 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

A 10-year regional reanalysis of desert dust aerosol at high spatial resolution

Enza Di Tomaso, Jerónimo Escribano, Paul Ginoux, Sara Basart, Francesca Macchia, Francesca Barnaba, Miguel Castrillo, Paola Formenti, Oriol Jorba, Lucia Mona, Gilbert Montané, Michail Mytilinaios, Vincenzo Obiso, Nick Schutgens, Athanasios Votsis, Ernest Werner, and Carlos PérezGarcía-Pando

Desert dust is the most abundant aerosol by mass residing in the atmosphere. It plays a key role in the Earth’s system by influencing the radiation balance, by affecting cloud formation and cloud chemistry, and by acting as a fertilizer for the growth of phytoplankton and for soil through its deposition over the ocean and land.

Due to the nature of its emission and transport, atmospheric dust concentrations are highly variable in space and time and, therefore, require a continuous monitoring by measurements. Dust observations are best exploited by being combined with model simulations for the production of analyses and reanalyses, i.e., complete and consistent four dimensional reconstructions of the atmosphere. Existing aerosol (and dust) reanalyses for the global domain have been produced by total aerosol constraint and at relatively coarse spatial resolution, while regional reanalyses exclude some of the regions containing the major sources of desert dust in Northern Africa and the Middle East.

We present here a 10-year reanalysis data set of desert dust at a horizontal resolution of 0.1°, and which covers the domain of Northern Africa, the Middle East and Europe. The reanalysis has been produced by assimilating in the MONARCH chemical weather prediction system (Di Tomaso et al., 2017) satellite retrievals over dust source regions with specific dust observational constraint (Ginoux et al., 2012; Pu and Ginoux, 2016).

Furthermore, we describe its evaluation in terms of data assimilation diagnostics and comparison against independent observations. Statistics of analysis departures from assimilated observations prove the consistency of the data assimilation system showing that the analysis is closer to the observations than the first-guess. Temporal mean of analysis increments show that the assimilation led to an overall reduction of dust with pattern of systematic corrections that vary with the seasons, and can be linked primarily to misrepresentation of source strength.

Independent evaluation of the analysis with AERONET observations indicates that the reanalysis data set is highly accurate, and provides therefore a reliable historical record of atmospheric desert dust concentrations in a recent decade.

References

Di Tomaso, E., Schutgens, N. A. J., Jorba, O., and Pérez García-Pando, C. (2017): Assimilation of MODIS Dark Target and Deep Blue observations in the dust aerosol component of NMMB-MONARCH version 1.0, Geosci. Model Dev., 10, 1107-1129.

Ginoux, P., Prospero, J. M., Gill, T. E., Hsu, N. C. and Zhao, M. (2012): Global-Scale Attribution of Anthropogenic and Natural Dust Sources and Their Emission Rates Based on Modis Deep Blue Aerosol Products. Rev Geophys 50.

Pu, B., and Ginoux, P. (2016). The impact of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation on springtime dust activity in Syria. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 16(21), 13431-13448.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the DustClim project which is part of ERA4CS, an ERA-NET initiated by JPI Climate, and funded by FORMAS (SE), DLR (DE), BMWFW (AT), IFD (DK), MINECO (ES), ANR (FR) with co-funding by the European Union (435690462); PRACE (eDUST/eFRAGMENT1/eFRAGMENT2), RES (AECT-2020-3-0013/AECT-2019-3-0001/AECT-2020-1-0007) for awarding access to MareNostrum at BSC and for technical support.

How to cite: Di Tomaso, E., Escribano, J., Ginoux, P., Basart, S., Macchia, F., Barnaba, F., Castrillo, M., Formenti, P., Jorba, O., Mona, L., Montané, G., Mytilinaios, M., Obiso, V., Schutgens, N., Votsis, A., Werner, E., and PérezGarcía-Pando, C.: A 10-year regional reanalysis of desert dust aerosol at high spatial resolution, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11644, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11644, 2021.

EGU21-156 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Present-day Patagonian dust emissions: Mass flux constraints, meteorological triggers and the effect on phytoplankton biomass

Nicolas Cosentino, Diego Gaiero, Laura Ruiz-Etcheverry, Fabrice Lambert, Gonzalo Bia, Lucio Simonella, Renata Coppo, Gabriela Torre, Martin Saraceno, and Veronica Tur

The magnitude of the climate forcing associated with mineral dust aerosols remains uncertain, due in part to a lack of direct observations on dust source areas. While modeling and satellite studies provide spatially extensive constraints, these studies must be supported by surface-validating, in situ dust monitoring. Our study focuses on Patagonia, the main source of dust to the southern oceans (>45ºS), a region of low biological productivity potentially susceptible to increased micronutrient fertilization through dust deposition and associated atmosphere‐to‐ocean CO2 flux. This mechanism is hypothesized to have contributed significantly to the last interglacial‐to‐glacial climatic transition. However, the dust‐phytoplankton biomass connection remains contentious for the present‐day climate system.

We analysed multi-year time series of surface dust-related visibility reduction (DRVR) and dust mass sampling at four downwind coastal monitoring sites, along with key meteorological time series at these same sites. We find that local DRVR across Patagonia is partly controlled by long-term water deficit (i.e., months), while same-day conditions play a smaller role, reflective of water retention properties of fine-grained dust-emitting soils in low-moisture conditions. This conclusion is supported independently by reanalysis data showing that large-scale dust outbreaks are usually associated with anomalously high long-term water deficit. By combining visibility data with surface dust sampling we were able to derive emission rates associated with regional patches of dust-emitting surfaces and test the skill of dust emission schemes to simulate dust activity close to the sources. Our results suggest that the inclusion of long-term hydrologic soil balance may improve the performance of dust emission schemes in climate models.

We also analyzed the impact of southernmost Patagonian dust emissions on southwestern Atlantic Ocean continental shelf and proximal open ocean satellite chlorophyll‐a concentration. We used the DRVR and mass flux time series of the southernmost site to model dust emission, transport, and deposition to the ocean. We then performed a dust event‐based analysis of chlorophyll‐a time series, using a novel approach by which time series are corrected for post‐depositional particle advection due to ocean currents. Finally, we performed total iron determinations, release experiments and iron solid speciation analysis in dust samples. Iron is a key micronutrient limiting phytoplankton biomass in high‐nutrient, low‐chlorophyll oceans such as offshore of the 200‐m isobath off Patagonia. We find no compelling evidence for an influence of dust as an enhancer of phytoplankton biomass either on shelf or proximal open ocean waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. For open ocean waters this is consistent with a lack of source‐inherited bioavailable iron in dust samples. Future case studies addressing similar questions should concentrate on dust sources with identified high contents of bioavailable iron, particularly in the Southern Hemisphere where atmospheric processing of iron-bearing particles is weak.

How to cite: Cosentino, N., Gaiero, D., Ruiz-Etcheverry, L., Lambert, F., Bia, G., Simonella, L., Coppo, R., Torre, G., Saraceno, M., and Tur, V.: Present-day Patagonian dust emissions: Mass flux constraints, meteorological triggers and the effect on phytoplankton biomass, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-156, 2021.

EGU21-9625 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

The impact of Sahara dust on air quality and public health in European countries

Qiaoqiao Wang, Jianwei Gu, and Xurong Wang

The frequent transport of Sahara dust toward Europe degrades the air quality and poses risk to human health. In this study we use GEOS-Chem (a global transport model) to examine the impact of Sahara dust on air quality and the consequent health effect in Europe for the year 2016–2017. The simualtion is conducted in a nested model with the native resolution of 0.25° × 0.3125° (Latitude × Logitude) over Europe (32.75°N–61.25°N, 15°W–40°E). The simulation on a global scale with a coarse horizontal resolution of 2° × 2.5° is also conducted to provide the boundary condition for the nested-grid simulation as well as aerosol optical depth (AOD) over the Sahara desert for model evaluation.

The model performance is evaluated by comparisons with surface observations including aerosol optical depth (AOD) from AERONET, and PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations from numerous air quality monitoring stations in European countries. Overall, the model well reproduces observed surface PM concentrations over most European countries with some underestimation in southern Europe. In addition, model AOD is highly correlated with AERONET data over both Sahara and European region.

The spatial distribution of dust concentrations, frequency of dust episodes, as well as the exposure and health effects are studied. The concentrations of Sahara dust decrease from 5–20 μg m-3 in south to 0.5–1.0 μg m-3 in north of Europe. Spain and Italy are most heavily influenced by Sahara dust in terms of both concentration levels and frequencies of occurrence. Strong dust episodes (>50 μg m-3) occur predominately in Southern Spain and Italy with frequency of 2–5%, while light dust episodes (>1 μg m-3) are often detected (5–30%) in Central and Western Europe.

The population-weighted dust concentrations are higher in Southern European countries (3.3–7.9 μg m-3) and lower in Western European countries (0.5–0.6 μg m-3). The health effects of exposure to dust is evaluated based on population attributable fraction (PAF). We use the relative risk (RR) value of 1.04 (95% confidence intervals: 1.00 – 1.09) per 10 µg m-3 of dust exposure based on the main model of Beelen et al. (2014). We estimate a total of 41884 (95% CI: 2110–81658) deaths per year attributed to the exposure to dust in the 13 European countries studied. Due to high contribution to PM10 in Spain, Italy and Portugal, dust accounts for 44%, 27% and 22% of the total number of deaths linked to PM10 exposure, respectively.

How to cite: Wang, Q., Gu, J., and Wang, X.: The impact of Sahara dust on air quality and public health in European countries, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9625, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9625, 2021.

EGU21-4677 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Dust emission and transport in Northwest China: WRF-Chem simulation and comparisons with multi-sensor observations 

Jianqi Zhao, Xiaoyan Ma, Shuoqiu Wu, and Tong Sha

In this study, the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with chemistry (WRF-Chem) is employed to simulate a dust process in Northwest China during May 2018. The model's ability to simulate the dust process in Northwest China is firstly evaluated using various satellite-retrieved and observational data. The four-dimensional assimilation method is also used to optimize meteorological data and effectively improve the simulation of the dust process.

 

Fig. 1. Differences of wind field (unit: m/s) between the simulations (a-d: unassimilated; e-h: assimilated) and the observations at 03:00 UTC on 20–23 May.

The comparisons between the simulations based on five dust emission schemes within WRF-Chem and the observations show that, the Shao01 scheme overall has good performance in simulating the emission flux, the spatial pattern of source region, as well as the spatiotemporal variation of dust mass concentration, during this dust process. In comparison to Shao01, the GOCART AFWA and Shao04 schemes can also produce quite similar spatial pattern of dust source region, but tend to overestimate or underestimate dust emission and mass concentration. The Shao11 scheme fails to simulate the dust process since the importance of the fully disturbed particle size distribution is omitted. It is also noted that the GOCART scheme can well reproduce dust emission processes under weak wind erosion but underestimate dust emission flux under strong wind erosion. In addition, the GOCART scheme has produced some spurious emissions and thus blurred the distribution of dust source region.

Fig. 2. The averaged dust emission flux (unit: μg/m2/s) from the GOCART (a), GOCART AFWA (b), Shao01 (c), Shao04 (d) and Shao11 (e) schemes during 17–23 May.

Fig. 3. Variations of daily (a) and hourly (b) surface PM10 concentrations, friction velocity (c) and 10 m wind speed (d) at the Turpan station during 17–23 May.

Northwest China is covered by mountains, basins, deserts and other landforms, thus the complex terrain is one of the key factors to influence the dust process over the region. Our study shows that after being emitted, the airborne dust transported toward the east and west. The dust to the east was diffused rapidly, but the portion toward the west was blocked and accumulated at the edges of the mountains and thus produced dust weather characterized by high dust concentration and long lifetime. The dust accumulated at the edges of the mountains could reach an altitude of more than 6 km due to wind and thermal effect, and finally arrive at Tibetan Plateau and eastern China.

Fig. 4. The simulated (with Shao01 scheme) dust (unit: μg /m3) transport path (a-c) during 20–23 May and vertical profiles of 38.5°N (d) and 85°E (g) at 05:00 UTC on 21 May, 36°N (e) and 95° E (h) at 06:00 UTC on 22 May and 36°N (f) and 98°E (i) at 05:00 UTC on 23 May.

How to cite: Zhao, J., Ma, X., Wu, S., and Sha, T.: Dust emission and transport in Northwest China: WRF-Chem simulation and comparisons with multi-sensor observations , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4677, 2021.

EGU21-9167 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

A revised mineral dust emission scheme in GEOS-Chem: improvements in dust simulations over China

Rong Tian, Xiaoyan Ma, and Jianqi Zhao

Mineral dust plays a significant role in climate change and air quality, but large uncertainties remain in terms of dust emission prediction. In this study, we improved the treatments of dust emission process in a Global 3-D Chemical Transport model (GEOS-Chem) v12.6.0, by incorporating the geographical variation of aerodynamic roughness length (Z0), smooth roughness length (Z0s), soil texture, introducing Owen effect and Lu and Shao (1999) formulation of sandblasting efficiency α. To investigate the impact of the modifications incorporated in the model, several sensitivity simulations were performed for a severe dust storm during March 27, 2015 to April 2, 2015 over northern China. Results show that simulated threshold friction velocity is very sensitive to the updated Z0 and Z0s field, with the relative difference ranging from 10% to 60% compared to the original model with uniform value. An inclusion of Owen effect leads to an increase in surface friction velocity, which mainly occurs in the arid and semi-arid regions of northwest China. The substitution of fixed value of α assumed in original scheme with one varying with friction velocity and soil texture based on observations reduces α by 50% on average, especially over regions with sand texture. Comparisons of sensitivity simulations and measurements show that the revised scheme with the implement of updates provides more realistic threshold friction velocities and PM10 mass concentrations. The performance of the improved model has been evaluated against surface PM10 observations as well as MODIS aerosol optical depth (AOD) values, showing that the spatial and temporal variation of mineral dust are better captured by the revised scheme. Due to the inclusion of the improvement, average PM10 concentrations at observational sites are more comparable to the observations, and the average mean bias (MB) and normalized mean bias (NMB) values are reduced from -196.29μg m-3 and -52.79% to -47.72μg m-3 and -22.46% respectively. Our study suggests that the erodibility factor, sandblasting efficiency and soil-related properties which are simply assumed in the empirical scheme may lack physical mechanism and spatial-temporal representative. Further study and measurements should be conducted to obtain more realistic and detailed map of these parameters in order to improve dust representation in the model. 

How to cite: Tian, R., Ma, X., and Zhao, J.: A revised mineral dust emission scheme in GEOS-Chem: improvements in dust simulations over China, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9167, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9167, 2021.

EGU21-7374 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

A modeling insight into the transport of large dust particles

Eleni Drakaki, Alexandra Tsekeri, Vasillis Amiridis, Stavros Solomos, Antonis Gkikas, Emmanouil Proestakis, Christos Spyrou, Sotirios Mallios, Eleni Marinou, Claire L. Ryder, and Petros Katsafados

Mineral dust is an important component of the climate system, affecting radiation, cloud formation, biogeochemical cycles, as well as having negative effects on solar energy budget and human health. All these processes are affected from the size of the particles which is significantly underestimated by the Earth System Models. Here, we present results from a first attempt to modify the size distribution parameterizations in the GOCART-AFWA dust scheme of WRF - Chem, by including the large dust particles with diameters greater than 20 µm to describe the mineral dust cycle. The parameterization is based on Saharan dust observational datasets from FENNEC and SAMUM campaigns. We investigate the impact of the extended size distribution on the overall transported dust load and also the impact of particle settling considerations in deposition rates. The model results are compared with airborne dust measurements from AER-D campaign. In order to achieve the best agreement with the observations, an artificial force that counteracts gravity approximately by 80% for the large particles is needed, indicating the presence of one or more under-represented physical processes in the model.

Acknowledgment: This research was supported by D-TECT (Grant Agreement 725698) funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. 

How to cite: Drakaki, E., Tsekeri, A., Amiridis, V., Solomos, S., Gkikas, A., Proestakis, E., Spyrou, C., Mallios, S., Marinou, E., Ryder, C. L., and Katsafados, P.: A modeling insight into the transport of large dust particles, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7374, 2021.

The aeolian dust deposits in the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP) contain valuable information about past environmental changes in Asia. Unlocking this information requires knowledge on the Asian dust sources and dust transport mechanisms, and how the different source regions contribute to the total dust loading and deposition over the CLP.  By studying the dust transport and deposition under present day conditions using the Lagrangian Particle Dispersion model,  FLEXPART,  and the FLEXDUST dust emission model, we aim to better understand the dust signal in the Chinese loess records to constrain their interpretation as paleoclimate proxies.  

Here we present results from a 20 year simulation of transport and deposition of aeolian dust over the CLP from 1999 until 2019, during the dust event season March until May. Both FLEXPART and FLEXDUST are driven by ERA5 ECMWF meteorological reanalysis data. FLEXPART is set up in a receptor oriented configuration, where many computational particles are released from the receptor points at each timestep. The computational particles are followed for 5 days backward in time probing for possible source regions. The end product is emission sensitivity, i.e. how sensitive the receptor is to emissions in possible source regions. The emission sensitivity establishes a linear relation between the source and receptor. Therefore, multiplying the emission sensitivity with the dust emission flux estimated by FLEXDUST produces a map of the source contribution for each receptor point. To investigate the difference in source regions between the fine and coarse dust, we include two particle sizes, 2 μm and 20 μm, in our simulation. The output from the model is compared against Asian polar vortex (APV) and Asian winter monsoon indices to identify how changes in the large scale atmospheric circulation affect the interannual variation of dust transport and deposition, and to determine whether the amount of deposited dust over the CLP is primarily governed by changes in the emission strength or by changes in the atmospheric circulation.  

How to cite: Haugvaldstad, O., Tang, H., Kaakinen, A., and Stordal, F.: Aeolian dust sources, transport and deposition over the Chinese Loess Plateau during 1999-2019: A study using the FLEXDUST and FLEXPART models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3870, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3870, 2021.

EGU21-14013 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

On the relationship of aeolian relief, microrelief and wind direction with the concentration of dust aerosol in the near-surface layer

Elena Malinovskaya, Otto Chkhetiani, and Leonid Maksimenkov

Saltations, secondary knock-out of particles, and their rolling over the surface in the abrasion process are the main source of micron- and submicron-sized particles near the surface [1]. Zones with different aerosol generation rates and wiping dynamics emerge around growing aeolian structures [3,4]. On the leeward slope, larger particles remain in the embedding zone and abrasion is less active. On the windward slope, fractions of smaller size accumulate in the zone of cascade capture of layers by wind [2], and abrasion is predominant.

 

The occurrence of aeolian forms varies in time depending on their height. Three areas are considered: 1-3 m, 1-3 cm, <1 cm. The effect of changes in wind direction at intervals of a few hours changes the length of zones near aeolian structures. Thus, the cascade trapping zone expands and the accumulation zone narrows. Aeolian microstructures on the surface of the windward slope decrease the length of the cascade capture zone, leaving structures with a height > 1 cm almost unchanged.

 

We consider a sample of data from summer field measurements obtained in the evening with close values of air temperature (30-32°C) and wind speeds (6.1-6.5 m/s). Observations were made on a perennial patch of unfixed sands about 1.5 km long and 200-300 m wide at 5 km to the west of Naryn Khuduk settlement (Kalmykia, 2010-2020). The lines of dune ridges for this area extend approximately in the latitudinal direction.

 

Based on the empirical functions of aerosol size and mass distribution, the classification related to the wind direction in relation to the line of windward and leeward slopes connection was obtained. When the wind direction changes from frontal to tangential along the slopes, mass concentrations of coarse aerosol fraction increase. This can be related to the processes of chipping for newly involved large particles from the layers of the leeward slope setting zone. The phenomenon is also illustrated by the observed emergence on the surface of a ripple with a ridge spacing of 10-30 cm during the next day of a micro-ridge with a period of 1-2 cm. For the windward slope line change model [5], it was obtained that the fraction of detached particles decreases with the growth of new structures. The presence of aeolian ripples [6] and larger particles generally reduces the fraction of particles moving in the wind flow.  There is weakening of wiping intensity at collision and reduction of concentration of submicron particles as a result, as compared to the case of absence of developed microrelief. The type of aerosol distribution function is influenced by the size of the embedding and cascade trapping zones and the composition of the layer of particles involved in collisions and displacements near the surface.

The study was supported by the Russian Science Foundation project 20-17-00214.

 

1.Houser C.A., Nickling W.G. Sedimentology. 48(2). 255,. (2001)

2.Chepil W.S. Soil Science  60(4) 305.(1945)

3.Anderson R. Sedimentology 34, 943 (1987).

4.Hoyle R., Woods A. Phys. Rev. E 56, 6861 (1997).

5.Malinovskaya E.A. Izvestiya. Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics 55(2) 218 (2019)

6. Malinovskaya E. et al. EGU2019-3693-1 (2019)

 

How to cite: Malinovskaya, E., Chkhetiani, O., and Maksimenkov, L.: On the relationship of aeolian relief, microrelief and wind direction with the concentration of dust aerosol in the near-surface layer, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14013, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14013, 2021.

EGU21-8233 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Impact of surface roughness on dust occurrence frequency over arid regions

Martina Klose, Carlos Pérez García-Pando, Paul Ginoux, and Ron L. Miller

Soil dust aerosol created by wind erosion of arid and semi-arid surfaces dominates climate effects over large areas of the Earth. To represent the dust cycle, Global Earth System Models (ESMs) typically prescribe preferential dust sources phenomenologically using empirical source scaling functions. While this approach has helped to compensate for a lack or inaccuracy of soil and surface input data to models, it potentially limits progress in the representation of the global dust cycle, because such strong empirical constraints make models less sensitive to parameters known to affect dust emission, and thus potentially insensitive to changes in climate. Here we investigate the link between surface roughness due to non-erodible elements such as vegetation, pebbles and rocks, and the spatial patterns of dust activity. Using two different satellite-based methods to represent roughness within an atmospheric dust transport model, we evaluate the impact of surface roughness on the spatial distribution of dust optical depth occurrence frequency observed from satellite by both reducing the atmospheric momentum available for particle entrainment and protecting the surface from dust emission. We test the variability of our results across conceptually different parameterizations of dust emission and drag partition. Our results suggest that the spatial patterns of dust activity are largely determined by surface roughness, not only in semi-arid, but also in arid regions, where green vegetation is sparse or absent. 

How to cite: Klose, M., Pérez García-Pando, C., Ginoux, P., and Miller, R. L.: Impact of surface roughness on dust occurrence frequency over arid regions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8233, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8233, 2021.

EGU21-10848 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Variability in modelled airborne dust mineralogy derived from global soil composition uncertainties

María Gonçalves Ageitos, Matt Dawson, Vincenzo Obiso, Martina Klose, Ron Miller, Oriol Jorba, and Carlos Pérez García-Pando

Dust aerosols consist on a variety of minerals with different physic and chemical properties. As such, they interact with short and long wave radiation, potentially form clouds, act as nutrients modulating biogeochemical cycles, or influence atmospheric chemistry, differently. Most current state-of-the-art Earth System Models (ESMs) neglect the complexity in dust composition, mainly due to computational constraints, but also to the existing uncertainties in the size resolved composition of parent soils, the resulting distribution of minerals in airborne dust, and the scarcity of observations to constrain them.

Within this work, we assess the variability of global dust composition due to uncertainties in the characterization of the parent soil mineralogy. To that end, we consider two available global soil mineralogy atlases, developed by Claquin et al. (1999) –C1999- and Journet et al. (2014) –J2014-, which represent respectively 8 and 12 relevant minerals for climate (namely: illite, smectite/montmorillonite, kaolinite, calcite, gypsum, hematite, quartz, and feldspars in C1999, and those plus chlorite, vermiculite, goethite, and mica in J2014). Thanks to a recently developed feature of the MONARCH atmospheric-chemistry model, we are able to explicitly resolve the minerals’ atmospheric cycle. Therefore, we define two global experiments to assess changes on airborne dust composition attributed to the soil mineralogy assumptions and provide a measure of their variability. We also perform a preliminary evaluation of the global mineralogy results against available observations of mineral fractions in surface dust concentration.

Our results will inform the climate modelling community about the potential variability in dust composition, an aspect that will gain relevance as ESMs continue growing in complexity and new processes to better characterize aerosols’ forcing or biogeochemical cycles are added. Further observational constraints, such as those that will derive from the EMIT NASA mission on soil composition or the FRAGMENT experimental campaigns on airborne dust characterization, will be key in the near future to improve our understanding of the impact of dust mineralogy on fundamental climate features.

How to cite: Gonçalves Ageitos, M., Dawson, M., Obiso, V., Klose, M., Miller, R., Jorba, O., and Pérez García-Pando, C.: Variability in modelled airborne dust mineralogy derived from global soil composition uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10848, 2021.

EGU21-4359 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Multiannual study of convective and stratiform situations associated to wet deposition of desert dust in the Sahelian band

Thomas Audoux, Benoit Laurent, Béatrice Marticorena, Gilles Bergametti, Jean Louis Rajot, Anaïs Féron, and Cécile Gaimoz

In the semi-arid Sahel region, wet deposition can represent more than half of the total annual deposition and are associated to different rainfall types, from stratiform precipitation to convective systems. Surface parameters such as temperature, wind speed, wind direction as well as rainfall rate can be used to distinguish these situations. We investigate the behaviour of dust wet deposition at the event-scale based on a multiannual (2007 to 2016) monitoring of wet deposition fluxes, PM10 concentration, precipitation and meteorological parameters in two Sahelian stations Banizoumbou (Niger, 13.54°N, 2.66 E) and Cinzana (Mali, 13.28°N, 5.93°W) of the INDAAF network. Rainfall events have been classified into three types: (i) stratiform, convective associated with (ii) weak precipitation or (iii) intense precipitation. This classification is based on selected criteria regarding evolutions of surface temperature, of wind speed and direction before and after the rainfall onset as well as on the event rainfall rate. Based on an interpretation of hundreds of single events, almost 25% of wet deposition events are associated with non-convective situation, more than 40% with atmospheric convective situation and weak precipitation, and more than 35% events with atmospheric convective situation combined with intense precipitation. This exhaustive work over a long-time period of measurements illustrates the predominance of convective situations regarding wet deposition in the two Sahelian stations. Washout ratios (WR) have been computed from PM10 concentrations, precipitation and deposition fluxes for each kind of events when data were concomitant. The dependency of WR to precipitation amount is shown to differ depending on the rain types. For instance, the decreasing dependency of WR with the precipitation amount of non-convective events has been quantified and could be explained by a dilution effect of the deposition. On the contrary, no clear dependency of WR with the precipitation has been observed for atmospheric convective conditions associated with intense rainfall rate.

How to cite: Audoux, T., Laurent, B., Marticorena, B., Bergametti, G., Rajot, J. L., Féron, A., and Gaimoz, C.: Multiannual study of convective and stratiform situations associated to wet deposition of desert dust in the Sahelian band, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4359, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4359, 2021.

EGU21-7063 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Impacts of long-range-transported Saharan dust layers on atmospheric stability and turbulence in the trades

Manuel Gutleben, Silke Groß, and Martin Wirth

Aeolian Saharan mineral dust particles can be transported over long distances. Great amounts of Saharan mineral dust particles are transported westwards over the Atlantic Ocean towards the Caribbean islands especially during the boreal summer months. During the transport they can either have a direct environmental effect by absorbing, emitting and scattering radiation or an indirect effect by changing cloud micro-physical properties and by modifying cloud lifetime or formation.

Our recent studies indicate that elevated transported Saharan dust layers, so-called Saharan Air Layers (SALs), come along with enhanced concentrations of water vapor compared to the surrounding atmosphere. Radiative transfer simulations reveal that not the dust particles inside the SALs but the enhanced concentrations of water vapor play the dominant role for atmospheric heating in dust-laden subtropical regions. In this way water vapor has the potential to impact both atmospheric stability and turbulent properties not only inside the SALs but also at lower atmospheric levels.  To study the effects of water vapor on atmospheric turbulence and stability in SAL-regions, we performed wavelet analyses as well as calculations of power spectra on the basis of airborne lidar backscatter and water vapor measurements by the DLR lidar system WALES during the NARVAL-II research campaign. For an in-depth investigation of SAL-properties, several research flights during NARVAL-II were designed to lead over dust-laden regions upstream the Caribbean island of Barbados. Our analysis shows that water vapor heating does not only have an effect on the stability and turbulence of SALs by maintaining their confining inversions and promoting vertical mixing in their interior, but also hinders the development of shallow marine convection below.

In our presentation we will give an overview of the performed measurements and radiative transfer simulations as well as of the conducted stability and turbulence analyses by means of calculated power spectra and wavelet analyses.

How to cite: Gutleben, M., Groß, S., and Wirth, M.: Impacts of long-range-transported Saharan dust layers on atmospheric stability and turbulence in the trades, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7063, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7063, 2021.

EGU21-7449 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Present-day Saharan dust observed over the Atlantic Ocean

Jan-Berend Stuut, Catarina Guerreiro, Geert-Jan Brummer, and Michèlle van der Does

Mineral dust plays an important role in the ocean’s carbon cycle through the input of nutrients and metals which potentially fertilise phytoplankton, and by ballasting organic matter from the surface ocean to the sea floor. However, time series and records of open-ocean dust deposition fluxes are sparse. Here, we present a multi-year time series of Saharan dust collected by dust-collecting buoys that are monitoring dust in the equatorial North Atlantic Ocean as well as by moored sediment traps at the buoys' positions at ~21°N/21°W and ~11°N/23°W. We present dust-flux data as well as particle-size distribution data, and make a comparison of the dust collected from the atmosphere at the ocean surface with the dust settling through the ocean and intercepted by the submarine sediment traps. See: www.nioz.nl/dust

How to cite: Stuut, J.-B., Guerreiro, C., Brummer, G.-J., and van der Does, M.: Present-day Saharan dust observed over the Atlantic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7449, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7449, 2021.

EGU21-13781 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

The ASKOS experiment for the validation of Aeolus L2A aerosol product 

Eleni Marinou, Vasslis Amiridis, Ioanna Mavropoulou, Holger Baars, Stelios Kazadzis, Marco Rosoldi, Dragos Ene, Africa Barreto, Stefano Casadio, Cordula Zenk, Jean Sciare, Grisa Mocnik, Konrad Kandler, Jan-Berend Stuut, Sergio Rodrigez, Peter Knipertz, Thomas Rutz, Mika Komppula, Vassiliki Daskalopoulou, and George Hloupis and the ASKOS team

For the in-orbit calibration and validation of the Aeolus products, ESA organized the Aeolus Tropical campaign, which will take place on June-July 2021 at Cape Verde region. During the campaign, Aeolus underfights will be performed with several aircrafts (by DLR, NASA, LATMOS, and the University of Nova Gorica (UNG)) and advanced ground-based instrumentation will be deployed in Mindelo island within ASKOS (https://askos.space.noa.gr/) experiment. ASKOS observations will provide an unprecedented dataset for the aerosol and wind conditions in the region, in order to provide reference values for the Cal/Val of the mission. Apart from the main aerosol Cal/Val objective of ASKOS, the foreseen synergistic activities will provide a wealth of information to address scientific questions posed by the participating groups on dust characterization, transportation and it’s impact of radiation and cloud formation.

Here, we report on the status of the ASKOS preparations for the evaluation of the aerosol and cloud product, focusing on the instrumentation requirements and availability, as well as the engagement of the scientific community so far. ASKOS will deploy advanced ground-based and airborne remote sensing and in-situ instrumentation, including the full ACTRIS aerosol and cloud remote sensing/in-situ facilities and airborne in-situ sensors to be operated on drones and/or aircrafts. The main ground-based remote sensing instrumentation in Cape Verde will consist of sophisticated lidar systems, including the EVE lidar, a circular polarization system that is tailored to mimic the Aeolus measurement from ground, the multi-wavelength Polly-XT and the WALL-E prototype for detecting particle orientation. The instrumentation will also include sun-photometers such as AERONET-CIMEL, but also polarimeters to advance microphysical retrievals for non-spherical particles such as dust. Cloud remote sensors including a cloud radar and a microwave radiometer will operate in parallel along with meteorological radiosondes. In-situ sensors at surface and onboard UAVs and light aircrafts will be available. ASKOS will be fully supported by several operational modeling simulations for meteorological and atmospheric composition forecasting. ASKOS will remain open to contributions from other communities and research groups and more synergies will be pursued in the future.

 

How to cite: Marinou, E., Amiridis, V., Mavropoulou, I., Baars, H., Kazadzis, S., Rosoldi, M., Ene, D., Barreto, A., Casadio, S., Zenk, C., Sciare, J., Mocnik, G., Kandler, K., Stuut, J.-B., Rodrigez, S., Knipertz, P., Rutz, T., Komppula, M., Daskalopoulou, V., and Hloupis, G. and the ASKOS team: The ASKOS experiment for the validation of Aeolus L2A aerosol product , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13781, 2021.

EGU21-2677 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Lofted aerosol layers over the North Pole during the winter period 2019-2020 measured during MOSAiC 

Kevin Ohneiser, Ronny Engelmann, Albert Ansmann, Martin Radenz, Hannes Griesche, Julian Hofer, Dietrich Althausen, Johannes Bühl, Holger Baars, Patric Seifert, and Moritz Haarig

The MOSAiC (Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate) expedition, lasting from September 2019 to October 2020, was the largest Arctic research initiative in history. The goal of the expedition was to take the closest look ever at the Arctic as the epicenter of global warming and to gain fundamental insights that are key to better understand global climate change. We continuously operated a multiwavelength aerosol/cloud Raman lidar aboard the icebreaker Polarstern, drifting through the Arctic Ocean trapped in the ice from October to May, and monitored aerosol and cloud layers in the Central Arctic up to 30 km height at latitudes mostly > 85°N. The lidar was integrated in a complex remote sensing infrastructure aboard Polarstern. A polarization Raman lidar is designed to separate the main continental aerosol components (mineral dust, wildfire smoke, anthropogenic haze, volcanic aerosol). Furthermore, the Polarstern lidar enabled us to study the impact of these different basic aerosol types on the evolution of Arctic mixed-phase and ice clouds.  The most impressive and unprecedented observation was the detection of a persistent, 10 km deep aerosol layer of aged wildfire smoke over the North Pole region between 8 and 18 km height from October 2019 until the beginning of May 2020. The wildfire smoke layers originated from severe and huge fires in Siberia, Alaska, and western North America in 2019 and may have contained mineral dust injected into the atmosphere over the hot fire places together with the smoke. We will present the main MOSAiC findings including a study of a long-lasting mixed-phase cloud layer evolving in Arctic haze (at heights below 6 km) and the role of mineral dust in the Arctic haze mixture to trigger heterogeneous ice formation. Furthermore, we present a case study developing in the smoke-dominated layer around 10 km height.

How to cite: Ohneiser, K., Engelmann, R., Ansmann, A., Radenz, M., Griesche, H., Hofer, J., Althausen, D., Bühl, J., Baars, H., Seifert, P., and Haarig, M.: Lofted aerosol layers over the North Pole during the winter period 2019-2020 measured during MOSAiC , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2677, 2021.

EGU21-13039 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Polarization lidar for detecting dust orientation: first measurements

Alexandra Tsekeri, Volker Freudenthaler, Vassilis Amiridis, George Doxastakis, Alexandros Louridas, George Georgoussis, Spiros Metallinos, Josef Gasteiger, Nikolaos Siomos, Peristera Paschou, Thanasis Georgiou, George Tsaknakis, Christos Evangelatos, and Ioannis Binietoglou

The new polarization lidar nicknamed “WALL-E” is designed to monitor dust orientation. Dust orientation has not been extensively investigated for the Earth’s atmosphere, where dust is considered to be randomly-oriented. For monitoring dust orientation, the new polarization lidar emits linearly- and elliptically-polarized light at 1064 nm and detects the linear and circular polarization of the backscattered light. This is done with two lasers emitting in an interleaved fashion, and two telescopes collecting the backscattered light from both lasers. The measurements are performed at variable viewing angles and provide direct flags of dust orientation, along with more detailed information on particle microphysics. The first measurements for dust in Athens are presented.

 

 

Acknowledgements. The work is supported by the European Research Council under the European Community’s Horizon 2020 research and
innovation framework program/ERC grant agreement 725698 (D-TECT). We acknowledge PRACE for awarding us access to MareNostrum
at Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Spain. The work was supported by computational time granted from the Greek Research &
Technology Network (GRNET) in the National HPC facility - ARIS - under project ID pa170906-ADDAPAS, pr005038-REMOD and pr009019-EXEED.

How to cite: Tsekeri, A., Freudenthaler, V., Amiridis, V., Doxastakis, G., Louridas, A., Georgoussis, G., Metallinos, S., Gasteiger, J., Siomos, N., Paschou, P., Georgiou, T., Tsaknakis, G., Evangelatos, C., and Binietoglou, I.: Polarization lidar for detecting dust orientation: first measurements, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13039, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13039, 2021.

EGU21-4752 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Model-based closure experiments with optical particle counters for dust-like aerosols

Josef Gasteiger, Adrian Walser, Maximilian Dollner, Marilena Teri, and Bernadett Weinzierl

The size distribution of desert dust is a central parameter, e.g., for the dust climate effect and the fertilization of oceans and rain forests. The uncertainties of size distribution measurements, however, are large for which the nonsphericity of dust particles is a major reason. Optical particle counters (OPCs) are frequently used for size distribution measurements and possible reasons for uncertainties include (a) the fact that nonspherical dust particles fly with individual orientations through the sampling volume of the OPC while the scattering signals and derived sizes depend on particle orientation, (b) the variability of particle shape, and (c) uncertainties about which definition of particle size is best suited for nonspherical dust.

To test the consistency between OPC measurements and independent measurements with other instruments types (e.g., a nephelometer or a lidar) closure experiments can be performed. In such experiments, size distributions derived from OPC measurements are used as input for model calculations of specific optical parameters which then are compared to independent measurements of the same optical parameters (e.g. scattering or backscattering coefficient) of the same aerosol. Deviations have been reported in the literature for desert dust. These deviations may be caused by the particle nonsphericity affecting the derivation of size distributions from OPC as indicated above but may also have other causes, e.g., using a wrong refractive index or assuming spherical particles for calculating the specific optical parameters. So far, the OPC nonsphericity effect has not been investigated in detail. A better understanding of this effect would be helpful for our understanding of size distribution uncertainties and of reasons for deviations in closure experiments.

In order to gain insight into the OPC nonsphericity effect, we performed simulations for different combinations of OPCs and instruments measuring specific optical parameters. Irregular dust-like shapes over a wide size range and different refractive indices were considered. Firstly, the deviations of the derived sizes from the original particle sizes were analyzed. Secondly, the derived sizes were used for Mie simulations of the optical parameters and the deviations from those of the original irregularly-shaped particle were calculated. In this respect, e.g., nephelometer responses and lidar-relevant parameters were simulated to reproduce possible closure experiments. These results will be compared to measurement-based closure experiments performed during field campaigns or in a laboratory in order to investigate how well the OPC nonsphericity effect explains observed discrepancies.

The simulated closure experiments show, for example, an overestimation of the scattering coefficient at λ=532nm by about 5% to 34% (depending on size range) when using size distributions derived from the DMT CAS instrument (λ=658nm, 4°-12° scattering angle) assuming non-absorbing dust particles. Using the TSI OPS model 3330 (λ=660nm, 30°-150° scattering angle) deviations in the range from -16% to +16% are found.

How to cite: Gasteiger, J., Walser, A., Dollner, M., Teri, M., and Weinzierl, B.: Model-based closure experiments with optical particle counters for dust-like aerosols, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4752, 2021.

EGU21-13606 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Towards understanding the size distribution, composition and optical properties of freshly emitted dust and its relationship with the parent sediment

Carlos Pérez García-Pando, Cristina González-Florez, Adolfo González-Romero, Agnesh Panta, Jesús Yus-Díez, Andrés Alastuey, Konrad Kandler, Martina Klose, Xavier Querol, Cristina Reche, Marco Pandolfi, Sylvain Dupont, Vicken Etyemezian, George Nikolich, Jeronimo Escribano, Roger Clark, Bethany Elhmann, Rebecca Greenberger, Kamal Tajeddine, and Matic Ivančič

The physical and chemical properties of dust, i.e. its particle size distribution (PSD), mineralogical composition, shape and mixing state determine its climate effects. However, the lack of experimental data and understanding of the emitted dust and its relationship with the parent sediment and atmospheric forcing limit the extension of climate and dust models to account for potentially important regional variations in dust properties. In this context, the FRontiers in dust minerAloGical coMposition and its Effects upoN climate (FRAGMENT) project is dedicated to understand, constrain and calculate the global mineralogical composition of dust along with its effects upon climate. In September 2019, we conducted an intensive dust field campaign as a part of FRAGMENT near M’hamid El Ghizlane in Morocco, at the edge of the Sahara Desert. During the measurement period, dust events occurred frequently (about every 1-2 days) with varying intensity.

 

In this contribution, we provide a comprehensive overview and analysis of the sediment and airborne samples collected, and of the time-resolved measurements of dust concentration, PSD, optical properties and atmospheric forcing. We use mineralogical analyses of wet-sieved (totally disturbed) and dry-sieved (minimally disturbed) sediment samples at high particle-size resolution to better understand the fragmentation of sediment aggregates during wind erosion. We analyse the temporal variability of the number and volume PSDs along with the associated size-resolved dust emission fluxes using data from three optical particle counters deployed at different heights. We discuss the size-resolved particle composition, morphology, and mixing-state of the suspended dust determined by single particle analysis with electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray detection from samples collected on sticky carbon substrates with cascade impactors, flat-plate samplers, and free-wing impactors. Finally, scattering coefficients at 450, 525 and 635 nm and seven different angles (from 0º to 90º) obtained with a polar nephelometer and absorption coefficients at 370, 470, 520, 590, 660, 880 and 950 nm obtained with an aethalometer are used to analyse the variability of extensive and intensive optical parameters, such as scattering and absorption Ångström exponents (SAE and AAE), backscatter fraction (BF) and multi-wavelength single scattering albedo (SSA) for both PM2.5 and PM10 dust fractions in combination with PSD and meteorological measurements.

How to cite: Pérez García-Pando, C., González-Florez, C., González-Romero, A., Panta, A., Yus-Díez, J., Alastuey, A., Kandler, K., Klose, M., Querol, X., Reche, C., Pandolfi, M., Dupont, S., Etyemezian, V., Nikolich, G., Escribano, J., Clark, R., Elhmann, B., Greenberger, R., Tajeddine, K., and Ivančič, M.: Towards understanding the size distribution, composition and optical properties of freshly emitted dust and its relationship with the parent sediment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13606, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13606, 2021.

EGU21-1208 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Chemical and Hygroscopic Characterization of Surface Salts in Qaidam Basin: Implications for Climates

Jun Li, Wanyu Liu, Xiying Zhang, Sen Wang, and Xiangrui Kong

Salt particles from saline lakes and playas play important roles in many processes related to atmospheric chemistry and climate system, especially active in aerosol and cloud formations due to their high hygroscopicity and efficient ice nucleation ability. However, physiochemical natures of these salts are relatively poorly understood due to their chemical complexity. Deepened understandings on playa-origin aerosol particles are desired and are expected to improve current climate models. Only a few studies have investigated the climate impacts of the salts from saline lakes and playas, from the perspectives of hygroscopicity, cloud condensation nuclei activity and ice nucleation ability.1-3

In this study, the investigated salts are collected from the Qaidam Basin, which is one of the largest regions of saline lakes and playas on Earth. Four saline lake areas (Chaka, Keke, Qarhan and Mang’ai) are selected as the sampling sites, and four forms of samples are compared, including lake brines, crystalized brines, lakebed salts and crust salts. The cations (Na+, K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+) and anions (Cl, SO42−, and NO3) are simultaneously measured by the ion chromatography. A vapor sorption analyzer is used to measure the hygroscopic properties. To thoroughly understand the hygroscopic behaviors, the AIOMFAC model is used to predict the deliquescence RH (DRH) based on the chemical matrix of each sample.

From the ionic composition perspective, the crystalized brines and the brines show similar ionic textures, indicating that the crystalized brines well reflect the complex mineral composition of brines. In contrast, the natural solid salts, including lakebed salts and crust salts, show distinct mineral compositions from the brines, i.e., mainly NaCl, regardless of chemical composition of nearby lakes, suggesting that halite is the prevailing salt on the massive landscape exposed to the atmosphere. The hygroscopicity experimental results are well described by the AIOMFAC model, based on the ionic composition. The results show that the water uptake by crystalized salts is initialized by MgCl2 at RH 30-40%. For natural salts, the hygroscopic behavior is similar to NaCl except for the QH lakebed salt, which is co-influenced by both NaCl and KCl. The findings presented in this study improve our understandings of the physical and chemical properties of surface salts spread across the Qaidam Basin, and the implications to climate systems on Planet Earth and Mars are discussed.

 

Reference

1 K. A. Koehler et al., Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 112 (2007)

2 K. A. Pratt et al., J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos. 115, D15301 (2010) 17.

3 M. Tang et al., Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 124 (2019) 10844.

How to cite: Li, J., Liu, W., Zhang, X., Wang, S., and Kong, X.: Chemical and Hygroscopic Characterization of Surface Salts in Qaidam Basin: Implications for Climates, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1208, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1208, 2021.

EGU21-576 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

On mineral dust hygroscopicity

Mingjin Tang, Lanxiadi Chen, Chao Peng, and Wenjun Gu

Despite its importance, hygroscopicity of mineral dust aerosol remains highly uncertain. In this work, we investigated water adsorption and hygroscopicity of different mineral dust samples at 25 ∘C, via measurement of sample mass at different relative humidity (RH, up to 90 %) using a vapor sorption analyzer. Mineral dust samples examined (21 in total) included seven authentic mineral dust samples from different regions in the world and 14 major minerals contained in mineral dust aerosol. At 90 % RH, the mass ratios of adsorbed water to the dry mineral ranged from 0.0011 to 0.3080, largely depending on the BET surface areas of mineral dust samples. The fractional surface coverages of adsorbed water were determined to vary between 1.26 and 8.63 at 90 % RH, and it was found that the Frenkel–Halsey–Hill (FHH) adsorption isotherm could describe surface coverages of adsorbed water as a function of RH well, with AFHH and BFHH parameters in the range of 0.15–4.39 and 1.10–1.91, respectively. The comprehensive and robust data obtained would largely improve our knowledge of hygroscopicity of mineral dust aerosol.

How to cite: Tang, M., Chen, L., Peng, C., and Gu, W.: On mineral dust hygroscopicity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-576, 2021.

EGU21-1233 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Chemical Characterization of Saline Lake and Playa Salts in Qaidam Basin: Implications for Climates of Planet Earth and Mars

Wanyu Liu, Jun Li, Luis Santos, Johan Boman, Xiying Zhang, Sen Wang, and Xiangrui Kong

Salt aerosol from saline lakes and playas has been recognized to affect climate in the global scale, but the understandings of the chemical and physical natures of these salts are still limited due to their complex chemical composition. The Qaidam Basin, one of the largest and driest deserts on Earth, is composed of many saline lakes and is regarded as a good terrestrial analogue for Mars due to similar environment conditions and elementary composition(Xiao et al., 2017). The study on the chemical characteristics of salts from Qaidam Basin is helpful to explore their influences on climate and reveal the physical and chemical factors affecting the paleoclimate of both Planet Earth and Mars.

 

In this study, four types of salt samples (brines, crystalized brines, lakebed salts and crust salts) collected at and near four saline lakes (Chaka, Keke, Qarhan and Mang’ai) in the Qaidam Basin are studied for their physicochemical characteristics. The common cations (Na+, K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+) and anions (Cl, SO42−, and NO3) are determined by ion chromatography (IC), and the elemental compositions are measured by energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) spectrometry. The chemical composition results are analyzed by positive matrix factorization (PMF)(Paatero and Tapper, 1994). The pH of sample brines and solutions are measured, and the governing factors are discussed.

 

The common elements detected by XRF and IC have excellent consistency. Notably, the crystalized brines exhibit similar ionic compositions with brines, suggesting that the crystalized brines well reflect the complex mineral composition of brines and evaporative crystallization can be used for brine preservation. However, the natural solid salts (lakebed salts and crust salts) present obvious composition differences. Mg2+ and SO42- are primarily found in brines, while the natural solid salts are dominated by NaCl and KCl. The pH of the brines and salt solutions are found to correlate to Mg2+ concentrations and potentially affected by ambient CO2 uptake. The electrical conductivities of sample solutions are not linearly scaled by the dilution factors, indicating that balanced reactions and buffer systems exist in the salt textures. Three interpretable factors are identified by the PMF analysis, and the differences of sample types and sampling sites are clearly reflected by the three factors. The lakebed salts (except for the QH lakebed salt) presented excellently correlation with the crust salts, and the crystalized salts are greatly correlated with the brines. This study improves the understandings of the physiochemical features of saline lake and playa salts in Qaidam Basin, and the roles that surface salts potentially play in the climate systems of both Planet Earth and Mars are discussed.

 

Reference

Paatero, P., and Tapper, U., Environmetrics, 5, 111-126, 1994.

Xiao, L., Wang, J., Dang, Y., et al., Earth-Sci Rev, 164, 84-101, 2017.

How to cite: Liu, W., Li, J., Santos, L., Boman, J., Zhang, X., Wang, S., and Kong, X.: Chemical Characterization of Saline Lake and Playa Salts in Qaidam Basin: Implications for Climates of Planet Earth and Mars, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1233, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1233, 2021.

EGU21-13816 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Dust-dominated coarse particles as a medium for rapid secondary organic and inorganic aerosol formation in highly polluted air

Ye Kuang, Wanyun Xu, Linlin Liang, Yao He, Hongbin Cheng, Yuxuan Bian, Jiangchuan Tao, Gen Zhang, Pusheng Zhao, Nan Ma, Huarong Zhao, Guangsheng Zhou, Hang Su, Yafang Cheng, Xiaobin Xu, Min Shao, and Yele Sun

Secondary aerosol (SA) frequently drives severe haze formation on the North China Plain. However, previous studies mostly focused on submicron SA formation, thus our understanding of SA formation on supermicron particles remains poor. In this study, PM2.5 chemical composition and PM10 number size distribution measurements revealed that the SA formation occurred in very distinct size ranges. In particular, SA formation on dust-dominated supermicron particles was surprisingly high and increased with relative humidity (RH). SA formed on supermicron aerosols reached comparable levels with that on submicron particles during evolutionary stages of haze episodes. These results suggested that dust particles served as a medium for rapid secondary organic and inorganic aerosol formation under favorable photochemical and RH conditions in a highly polluted environment. Further analysis indicated that SA formation pathways differed among distinct size ranges. Overall, our study highlights the importance of dust in SA formation during non-dust storm periods and the urgent need to perform size-resolved aerosol chemical and physical property measurements in future SA formation investigations that are extended to the coarse mode because the large amount of SA formed thereon might have significant impacts on ice nucleation, radiative forcing, and human health.

How to cite: Kuang, Y., Xu, W., Liang, L., He, Y., Cheng, H., Bian, Y., Tao, J., Zhang, G., Zhao, P., Ma, N., Zhao, H., Zhou, G., Su, H., Cheng, Y., Xu, X., Shao, M., and Sun, Y.: Dust-dominated coarse particles as a medium for rapid secondary organic and inorganic aerosol formation in highly polluted air, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13816, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13816, 2021.

EGU21-14410 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27 | Highlight

The CLImate relevant processing of Mineral Dust by volatile Organic compounds (CLIMDO) project

Paola Formenti, Mathieu Cazaunau, Francesco Battaglia, Jean-François Doussin, Aline Gratien, Vincent Michoud, Claudia Di Biagio, Edouard Pangui, Antonin Bergé, Servanne Chevaillier, Cécile Mirande-Bret, Michael Giordano, Emmanouil Romanias, Antonia Zogka, Frédéric Thévenet, Vincent Gaudion, Ramiro Checa-Garcia, Didier Hauglustaine, Anne Cozic, and Yves Balkanski

As emphasized by the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), aerosols contribute the largest uncertainty to global radiative forcing budget estimates. The uncertainty stems largely from the lack of information related to global aerosol distributions, composition, and aging effects in the atmosphere, all of which affect aerosol radiative properties.

Of the two major categories of aerosols, natural and anthropogenic, natural aerosols remain the largest source of the uncertainty. This limits our capacity to measure and attribute total climate forcings. Without a firm understanding of total climate forcing, our ability to predict its evolution over time diminishes and limits the development of adaptation strategies for future climate change.

Aerosolized mineral dust is the largest single component of the global aerosol mass budget, making up nearly half of annual particle emissions to the atmosphere. Mineral dust aerosols influence the global climate through both direct interactions with radiation (scattering and absorption in the visible and IR regions) as well as indirect interactions with radiation (by serving as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) or ice nuclei (IN)). One potentially important aspect of dust aerosols is that they are able to uptake and heterogeneously react with gases. Henceforth, mineral dust may also play a significant but mostly unknown role in secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation in the atmosphere.

While the combination of the complex reaction pathways and processing mechanisms inherent to the dust/organic system is hampering our understanding of dust and organic aerosols on global climate, and despite a great number of progresses on climate-relevant properties of mineral dust and SOA in these past ten years, studies of the heterogeneous chemistry occurring between dust and organic species are sparse.

The CLImate relevant processing of Mineral Dust by volatile Organic compounds (CLIMDO) project tackles this under-explored science question by proposing the first comprehensive process-driven project addressing the reactivity of complex and realistic mineral dust/organic systems to better understand how dust and VOCs influence the global climate system.

CLIMDO will investigate the heterogeneous interaction of mineral dust with two of the most common organic SOA precursors: glyoxal and methylglyoxal from ubiquitous anthropogenic and biogenic sources, thought combination of innovative laboratory experiments in a well-controlled and characterized environment (the atmospheric simulation chamber CESAM) and advanced flow reactors and optical cells), the development of novel modelling schemes of both the reaction mechanisms and the resulting optical properties of mineral dust, and new simulations of the global direct radiative effect and SOA distribution using the LMDzOR-INCA.

This presentation describes the strategy and workplan of the CLIMDO project, including dissemination of results and open data, to inform the science community and foster and cluster new collaborations.

How to cite: Formenti, P., Cazaunau, M., Battaglia, F., Doussin, J.-F., Gratien, A., Michoud, V., Di Biagio, C., Pangui, E., Bergé, A., Chevaillier, S., Mirande-Bret, C., Giordano, M., Romanias, E., Zogka, A., Thévenet, F., Gaudion, V., Checa-Garcia, R., Hauglustaine, D., Cozic, A., and Balkanski, Y.: The CLImate relevant processing of Mineral Dust by volatile Organic compounds (CLIMDO) project, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14410, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14410, 2021.

EGU21-10896 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Geochemical fingerprints and North-African dust sources: results from a multisite network of aerosol deposition in the south-western Europe

Jorge Pey, Juan Cruz Larrasoaña, Jesús Reyes, Noemí Pérez, José Carlos Cerro, Sonia Castillo, María Pilar Mata, José María Orellana-Macías, Jesús Causapé, Blas L. Valero-Garcés, Belén Oliva-Urcia, Javier Santos-González, and Rosa Blanca González-Gutiérrez

Abstract

The DONAIRE network (Pey et al. 2020) monitors the phenomenology of geochemical, magnetic and mineralogical variations of bulk atmospheric deposition in the Iberian Peninsula- Balearic Island. In this work we focus on recent North African dust deposition with a double objective: 1) to characterize the main geochemical fingerprints with respect to other sources of pollution; 2) to perform a source apportionment study to identify different desert-dust source areas. We used one year of data (June 2016-July 2017) from 15 monitoring sites (regional and remote, urban, industrial, or agricultural). We focus here on the impact caused by the main 4 North African dust deposition events globally affected this network.

Our results evidence that dust deposition patterns are controlled by: i) the meteorological scenario behind dust transport, ii) the occurrence/absence of wet deposition, and iii) the local-to-regional nearby topography. In general, the largest dust-deposition events occur nearby mountain barriers during low-pressure systems approaching Iberia and NW Africa.

Moderate to intense dust deposition events are well characterized by their chemical composition. The Fe/Ti, Na/Al, K/Al or (Ca+Mg)/Fe ratios reveal a number of patterns across the network. For example, Fe/Ti ratio varies from around 10-13 during warm-season events to 22-35 during cold season episodes, potentially indicating different North-African dust sources.

The best source apportionment solution extracts 10 factor/sources, from which three are mineral in composition. Two of them are interpreted as different North African dust mixture-of-sources, whereas the third mineral factor corresponds to regional dust particles. The overall contribution of such desert-dust sources may explain up to 90% of total episodic deposition during the most intense events.

These results indicate that chemical fingerprinting could be used to infer the recent North African dust deposition history. Studies on lake and peatland sequences following a similar approach are in progress and preliminary data show they be used to trace Saharan dust during the Holocene and reconstruct its relationship with climate phases.

 

Reference

Pey J., Larrasoaña J.C., Pérez N., Cerro J.C., Castillo S. et al. (2020). Phenomenology and geographical gradients of atmospheric deposition in southwestern Europe: results from a multi-site monitoring network. Sci. Tot. Environ., 140745. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140745.

 

Acknowledgements

POSAHPI (PID2019-108101RB-I00) and DONAIRE (CGL2015-68993-R) projects funded by Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación and FEDER Funds.

How to cite: Pey, J., Larrasoaña, J. C., Reyes, J., Pérez, N., Cerro, J. C., Castillo, S., Mata, M. P., Orellana-Macías, J. M., Causapé, J., Valero-Garcés, B. L., Oliva-Urcia, B., Santos-González, J., and González-Gutiérrez, R. B.: Geochemical fingerprints and North-African dust sources: results from a multisite network of aerosol deposition in the south-western Europe, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10896, 2021.

EGU21-13444 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

The DUST^2 Project: A source-to-sink investigation of the modern dust system in southwestern North America

Jeffrey Munroe, Janice Brahney, Greg Carling, Maura Hahnenberger, Kevin Perry, and S. McKenzie Skiles

The DUST^2 project is a new Critical Zone Thematic Cluster funded by the US National Science Foundation.  DUST^2, an abbreviation for Dust across a Desert-Urban-Summit Transect, will study the modern dust system in southwestern North America, from source to sink using a combination of methods.  Previous work has demonstrated that arid lands in the southwestern US are significant sources of mineral dust.  The amount of dust emitted increased notably following European settlement, and climate models predict future increases in dust emission in response to climate warming.  This dust is transported to the north and east by the wind, particularly during the springtime and coincident with the passage of strong frontal systems.  The properties of this natural dust are altered as it mixes with anthropogenic aerosols sourced from industry and other activities along the densely populated Wasatch Front in northern Utah.  Eventually, this dust is delivered to mountain ranges at the eastern border of the Basin and Range as well as in the Rocky Mountains.  There, dust impacts the albedo of snowpack, triggering changes in snowmelt timing and magnitude.  Dust also influences the developmental trajectories of mountain soils and alters the nutrient status of mountain ecosystems.  The six primary investigators of the DUST^2 project, along with an array of additional staff and students, will study this dust system with field and lab-based methods focused on dust emitting landscapes, dust transport modeling, dust collection in urban and mountain settings, snow monitoring and snowmelt modeling, and investigation of dust-influenced soils coupled with analysis and modeling of the cycling of dust-derived nutrients.  A major goal of this project is to incorporate researchers beyond those responsible for establishing the overall project framework.  Anyone interested in learning about ways to collaborate or become involved with the DUST^2 effort should contact a member of the project leadership team listed as authors on this abstract.

How to cite: Munroe, J., Brahney, J., Carling, G., Hahnenberger, M., Perry, K., and Skiles, S. M.: The DUST^2 Project: A source-to-sink investigation of the modern dust system in southwestern North America, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13444, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13444, 2021.

EGU21-5793 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Climatology of dust deposition in the Adriatic Sea and biological response of Rogoznica Lake (central Adriatic)

Boris Mifka, Irena Ciglenečki, and Maja Telišman Prtenjak

Airborne desert dust is one of the most abundant aerosols and an important factor in climate
change. After deposition in the sea, mineral dust acts as the nutrient. In this study, the climatology
of desert dust deposition in the Adriatic Sea was investigated with special reference to the possible
source and mineralogical characteristics of transported dust from North Africa. The effect is
particularly examined in unique, isolated marine system, Rogoznica Lake (RL; 43° 32 ’N, 15° 58’
E) through its biological response.
For that purpose, the MERRA-2 reanalysis data for dust deposition in the period 1989-
2019 were used. Annual dust deposition cycle in the Adriatic Sea has maximum in spring and fall
with stronger deposition in central and south. Wet deposition accounts for 63-92% of total
deposition and 75% of data contains less than 1.5% of the mass. Intensity classes are defined for
the remaining 25% and each refers to about 30% of the mass. On average, over 73 days per year
is of weak, 14.6 of moderate, and 3.65 of extreme intensity, which varies spatially. In order to
detect the specific synoptic patterns for the dust transport in relation to the dust sources activity
and deposition in the Adriatic Sea, the EOF analysis on 850 hPa was utilized. Positive or negative
mode phases correspond to deposition anomalies in the Adriatic Sea and can be related to particular
dust sources in North Africa.
Given the seasonal strong physicochemical stratification, relatively small volume, and only
source of freshwater and nutrients through precipitation during stratification, the Rogoznica Lake
proved ideal for monitoring desert dust deposition events, by monitoring nutrient concentration in
the surface layer (0–2 m). For the 2000-2012 period no correlation with MERRA-2 deposition
time series were found, but biological activity as a direct consequence of nutrient increase was
observed during deposition events. Since the Adriatic Sea was proved to be phosphate (P) and iron
(Fe) limited, the mineralogical database was used to estimate the amount of deposited P and Fe
during intense deposition events.

How to cite: Mifka, B., Ciglenečki, I., and Telišman Prtenjak, M.: Climatology of dust deposition in the Adriatic Sea and biological response of Rogoznica Lake (central Adriatic), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5793, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5793, 2021.

EGU21-4057 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Provenance of the late Neogene aeolian Baode Red Clay in northern Chinese Loess Plateau by combined rutile geochemical and zircon U-Pb analysis

Katja Bohm, Anu Kaakinen, Thomas Stevens, Yann Lahaye, and Hugh O'Brien

Understanding the provenance of aeolian dust deposits is essential for identifying past atmospheric circulation patterns and sediment generation. Knowledge of dust provenance not only reveals variations in the dust transportation paths and dust availability, but also increases our understanding of the climatic and/or tectonic controls on dust emission, allowing analysis of potential climate feedbacks. A globally exceptional terrestrial archive of atmospheric dust and paleoclimate can be found in North China on the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP), where mineral dust deposits cover ca. 440 000 km2 and can reach thicknesses of hundreds of meters.

The late Neogene (ca. 11–2.6 Ma) dust on the CLP is known as the Red Clay. The Red Clay deposits are the products of inland Asian aridification driven by global cooling, increasing continentality, and uplift phases of Tibetan Plateau (e.g. Lu et al., 2019). Previous Red Clay provenance studies have shown that the dust originated mostly from different sources in the areas west and northwest of the CLP (e.g. Nie et al., 2018; Shang et al., 2016), and was transported by the East Asian winter monsoon and westerly winds (all winds deriving from the west of the CLP). These studies focused on bulk sediment geochemistry, heavy mineral and detrital zircon U-Pb age analyses, which to date have not allowed detailed understanding of metamorphic source regions, source region variations, and indeed leave open ambiguities over differentiating between certain potential source areas.

Here we present combined detrital rutile trace element and detrital zircon U-Pb data from the late Neogene-early Quaternary Baode Red Clay-loess section (depositional ages of 6.91–2.41 Ma) in northern CLP, as well as detrital rutile data from 14 potential sedimentary source areas. Our study aims at testing the use of rutile geochemistry in multi-proxy sourcing the CLP sediments. Rutile, a common mineral in metamorphic rocks, has the potential of testing between potential source regions that cannot be distinguished by zircon U-Pb dating, the most commonly used single-grain provenance proxy. In Baode Red Clay, some samples show very similar zircon age spectra but have notable differences in their rutile geochemistry, which verifies the need of multi-proxy single-grain provenance work. The preliminary Baode rutile data also imply that the dominant source(s) of the dust changed at least at the Neogene-Quaternary transition, a suggestion which has not always been supported by previous provenance studies and is lacking consensus.

References

Lu, H. et al., 2019. Formation and evolution of Gobi Desert in central and eastern Asia. Earth-Science Reviews, 194: 251-263.

Nie, J. et al., 2018. Pre-Quaternary decoupling between Asian aridification and high dust accumulation rates. Science Advances, 4(2).

Shang, Y. et al., 2016. Variations in the provenance of the late Neogene Red Clay deposits in northern China. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 439: 88-100.

How to cite: Bohm, K., Kaakinen, A., Stevens, T., Lahaye, Y., and O'Brien, H.: Provenance of the late Neogene aeolian Baode Red Clay in northern Chinese Loess Plateau by combined rutile geochemical and zircon U-Pb analysis, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4057, 2021.

EGU21-4345 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Comparing a new paleomap of European loess landscapes to an atmospheric dust circulation model

Janina J. (Bösken) Nett, Frank Lehmkuhl, Erik J. Schaffernicht, Stephan Pötter, Philipp Schulte, Patrick Ludwig, Tobias Sprafke, and Ulrich Hambach

Loess is an important archive of environmental change covering approximately 10% of the Earth’s terrestrial surface. Numerous studies have analyzed loess deposits and in particular loess-paleosol sequences. To analyze these sequences, it is important to know the spatial distribution of aeolian sediments, their location relative to potential source areas, and the geomorphology of the sink area. We investigated these aspects by compiling a new map of aeolian sediments in Europe using highly resolved geodata from 27 countries (Lehmkuhl et al., in press). To determine the most relevant factors for the European loess distribution, we further mapped potential source areas and divided the map into different facies domains. We analyzed the geomorphological and paleoenvironmental effects on the deposition and preservation of Late Pleistocene loess. Finally, the geodata-based results were compared with results obtained from high-resolved regional numerical climate-dust experiments for the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) in Europe, which were performed with the LGM-adapted Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem-LGM; Schaffernicht et al., 2020).  Complementing the mapping-based findings with the WRF-Chem-LGM experiments results in an improved understanding of the Late Pleistocene loess landscape in Europe.

 

References:

Lehmkuhl, F., Nett, J.J., Pötter, S., Schulte, P., Sprafke, T., Jary, Z., Antoine, P., Wacha, L., Wolf, D., Zerboni, A., Hošek, J., Marković, S.B., Obreht, I., Sümegi, P., Veres, D., Zeeden, C., Boemke, B., Schaubert, V., Viehweger, J., Hambach, U. (in press). Loess landscapes of Europe – Mapping, geomorphology, and zonal differentiation. Earth-Science Reviews. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2020.103496

Schaffernicht, E.J., Ludwig, P., Shao, Y., 2020. Linkage between dust cycle and loess of the last Glacial Maximum in Europe. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 20, 4969–4986. Doi:10.5194/acp-20-4969-2020.

How to cite: Nett, J. J. (., Lehmkuhl, F., Schaffernicht, E. J., Pötter, S., Schulte, P., Ludwig, P., Sprafke, T., and Hambach, U.: Comparing a new paleomap of European loess landscapes to an atmospheric dust circulation model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4345, 2021.

EGU21-5227 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Simulated regional dust cycle in the Carpathian Basin and the Adriatic Sea region during the Last Glacial Maximum

Patrick Ludwig, Milivoj B. Gavrilov, Slobodan B. Markovic, Gabor Ujvari, and Frank Lehmkuhl

Different climate and environmental conditions dominated in the Carpathian Basin and the adjacent northern Italy/Adriatic region during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), as compared to today. For instance, high dust accumulation rates recorded in loess deposits point to an active dust cycle during the LGM. We investigated the climate conditions and regional dust cycle based on high-resolution (grid spacing of ~8.5 km) regional climate simulations for LGM conditions. The model output is in good agreement with proxy data, reproducing cold and dry conditions for the LGM. Highest dust emissions are simulated to the east of the Alpine ice sheet and in the Kvarner Bay region. While simulated dust deposition plumes in the northern Carpathian Basin indicate prevailing northerly (NW, N and NE) winds during dust events, strong Bora winds flowing down the slopes of the Dinaric Alps appear to play a major role in the local to regional dust cycle in the northern Adriatic region. From a seasonal perspective, the simulated dust cycle is most active during late winter and spring. A detailed analysis of climate and environmental conditions at key areas reveals that high wind speeds and low precipitation rates during late winter and spring correlate well with high dust emissions. In contrast, lower wind speeds, increasing precipitation, and the greening of vegetation prevent high dust emissions during summer and autumn. The occurrence of cyclonic circulation patterns in the Adriatic shelf region reveals that individual cyclones played an important role in transporting dust particles from the alluvial Po plain towards the eastern Adriatic loess deposition sites.

How to cite: Ludwig, P., Gavrilov, M. B., Markovic, S. B., Ujvari, G., and Lehmkuhl, F.: Simulated regional dust cycle in the Carpathian Basin and the Adriatic Sea region during the Last Glacial Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5227, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5227, 2021.

EGU21-5957 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Abrupt last glacial loess-dust deposition over Southeast England coupled with dynamics of the British-Irish Ice Sheet

Thomas Stevens, Daniele Sechi, Balázs Bradák, Ragna Orbe, Yunus Baykal, Giulia Cossu, Charilaos Tziavaras, Stefano Andreucci, and Vincenzo Pascucci

Loess deposits are globally important dust archives but are often limited by imprecise chronological control. In particular, loess records adjacent to former ice sheets seldom have detailed, independent age models yet have the potential to elucidate the causes of past high latitude (>50° N in Northern Hemisphere) coarse dust emission close to former ice sheets, a relatively poorly known aspect of past dust dynamics. Loess deposits in southern Britain were formed in close proximity to western parts of the last glacial Eurasian ice sheets. However, currently their age and accumulation rate remain poorly known, limiting interpretation of the controls on last glacial coarse dust emission and deposition in the region.

Here we apply high sampling resolution quartz optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) to constrain the timing of dust accumulation and loess formation at the Pegwell Bay site in east Kent, SE England. The OSL ages and Bayesian (Bacon) age modelling results are the most detailed to date for western European loess, and show that loess began to accumulate around c. 25 ka, coinciding with Heinrich event 2 and the coupling of Fennoscandian and British-Irish ice sheets. There were two phases of greatly enhanced dust accumulation at the site, at 25-23.5 ka and 20-19 ka, separated by a lower accumulation rate period. Loess accumulation appears to have stopped or been dramatically reduced after 19-18 ka. We propose that the dynamics of the British-Irish and Fennoscandian Ice Sheets, associated glacial lake drainage, and linked reorganisations of atmospheric circulation, act to control loess accumulation at the site. In particular, we argue that both periods of enhanced dust accumulation were caused by advance-retreat phases of the North Sea ice lobe, and associated drainage of Dogger Lake. These events would have led to abrupt input of sediment-rich ice dammed lake and melt water from northern and eastern England and the North Sea into the exposed southern North Sea basin. This would have dramatically increased sediment availability for transport and deposition as loess in SE England. Easterly and north-easterly winds that could have transported this dust to SE England would have been enhanced by presence of an ice sheet anticyclone, enlarged during Fennoscandian and British-Irish ice sheet coalescence, as well as katabatic winds and easterly flow occurring on the northern side of Atlantic cyclones forced south of southern Britain by the extended western British-Irish ice sheet. As such, last glacial dust dynamics and loess accumulation in Britain is highly influenced by the interaction of the British-Irish and Fennoscandian ice sheets, Atlantic storm tracks, and the topography and drainage of the exposed North Sea basin.

How to cite: Stevens, T., Sechi, D., Bradák, B., Orbe, R., Baykal, Y., Cossu, G., Tziavaras, C., Andreucci, S., and Pascucci, V.: Abrupt last glacial loess-dust deposition over Southeast England coupled with dynamics of the British-Irish Ice Sheet, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5957, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5957, 2021.

EGU21-6462 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Detrital zircon U-Pb ages reveal ice sheet and North Sea drainage driven dust source variability recorded in late Quaternary loess deposits at Pegwell Bay, SE England

Yunus Baykal, Thomas Stevens, Daniele Sechi, Giulia Cossu, Stefano Andreucci, and Vincenzo Pascucci

Loess deposits are the most widespread terrestrial archive of past climate and environmental change. While several tens of metres thick loess-palaeosol sequences in central and eastern Europe record multiple glacial-interglacial cycles, substantially thinner deposits along the English Channel in north-western Europe may provide valuable “snapshots” of abrupt climatic and environmental changes in areas proximal to the North Atlantic. Recently, high-resolution luminescence dating of loess deposits at Pegwell Bay, SE England has enabled constraint of the timing of dust fall over south-east England to 25-19 ka when the British-Irish and Fennoscandian Ice sheets had coalesced and the associated strengthened high pressure system favoured dust entrainment from the exposed southern North Sea basin. Two phases of greatly enhanced dust deposition at the site are centred around 25-23.5 ka and 20-19 ka, contemporaneous with changes in North Sea ice sheet extent and ice dammed lake drainage. Such changes may have triggered abrupt flood events that would have greatly enhanced sediment supply potentially overriding the input from other sediment sources, e.g. major rivers like the Rhine. However, while the temporal link between ice sheet and dust dynamics is striking, this possibility remains untested due to lack of sufficiently source diagnostic provenance analyses of loess along the North Sea and Channel coasts. The use of single grain detrital zircon U-Pb age assemblages can discriminate different sources to loess in suitable settings. Given the geochronological heterogeneity of terranes that account for sediment input into the North Sea basin during the late last glacial ranging from Baltica in the east, Cadomia-Armorica in the south and Laurentia-Ganderia-Meguma-Avalonia in the north and west, detrital zircon ages have great promise to link changes in North Sea drainage with dust source activity. As such, high n detrital zircon age assemblages have here been analysed from two samples of loess deposited at Pegwell Bay during the two phases of enhanced dust deposition. Preliminary results indicate that glacifluvial sediments derived from both Scandinavia and Britain combined with input from major rivers draining central and western continental Europe act as dust source during the first phase while glacifluvial sediments from Britain dominate during the second phase linked to the final abrupt decay of the North Sea ice lobe. These findings based on single grain detrital zircon data alone highlight the method’s potential to detect abrupt dust source variability in a favourable scenario of heterogenous source terranes. They also emphasise the importance of abrupt changes in ice sheets and their drainage in controlling wider-scale, rapid and substantial changes in atmospheric dust emission in higher latitudes, and by extension possible subsequent climatic and environmental effects.

How to cite: Baykal, Y., Stevens, T., Sechi, D., Cossu, G., Andreucci, S., and Pascucci, V.: Detrital zircon U-Pb ages reveal ice sheet and North Sea drainage driven dust source variability recorded in late Quaternary loess deposits at Pegwell Bay, SE England, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6462, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6462, 2021.

EGU21-15181 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

High-resolution color variations of Weichselian loess-palaeosol sequences in the Dnieper River basin (Ukraine)

Przemysław Mroczek, Maria Łanczont, Maryna Komar, Beata Hołub, Petro Gozhik, and Jerzy Nawrocki

High-resolution colour analyses of key loess-soil sequences (LPSs) in the Ukrainian part of Dnieper River basin - one of the major European rivers and the largest river in the borderland between Central and Eastern Europe. The subject of the study were LPSs from the Last Glaciation with a thickness of up to 10 meters. The aim of our studies is to reconstruct the Upper Pleistocene paleogeographic transformations recorded in the Dnieper LPSs.

In our study area the causative geomorphological agent was dust was blown away by wind from the exposed surfaces rich in loose fine-grained material (e.g. from a wide valley of a big river) and deposited on the land surface as silt covers of different thickness and spatial extent; in warm (interphase, interstadial) periods of the Weichselian it was fixed by vegetation and was the parent rock for the successively developing soils of different pedogenesis types. In the Last Glaciation the zone of long (~1000 km) and generally sub-meridional valley of the Dnieper River was located in the peri- and extraglacial zone and characterized by strong spatial climate gradient depending on the distance from the ice sheet extent. In our times this river flows across several vegetation-landscape zones (forest→forest-steppe→steppe).

The spectrophotometer made it possible to carry out colour analyses of individual units distinguished within LPSs, taking into account a number of parameters such as: CIELAB color space variables L* (luminance, i.e. lightness [0-100]), a* (>0: red, < 0: green), and b* (>0: yellow, < 0: blue), derived parameters like the Redness Index (RI) and the RGB variables (min., max, average). The analysed LPSs showed relatively high variability of the above mentioned parameters reflecting activity of sedimentation processes (=primary loess) as well as pedogenic changes (soil horizons of different stratigraphic rank) and slope transformations (reworked material). The results of these analyses (presented mainly as curve lines and heatmaps) specify characteristics of environmental conditions of individual litho- and pedostratigraphic units. The advantage of the analysed parameters is their high sensitivity reflecting variability of environmental parameters having global, but also regional or even just local significance.

Research carried out as part of the grant of National Science Centre, Poland as the project no. 2018/31/B/ST10/01507 entitled “Global, regional and local factors determining the palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental record in the Ukrainian loess-soil sequences along the Dnieper River Valley - from the proximal areas to the distal periglacial zone”.

How to cite: Mroczek, P., Łanczont, M., Komar, M., Hołub, B., Gozhik, P., and Nawrocki, J.: High-resolution color variations of Weichselian loess-palaeosol sequences in the Dnieper River basin (Ukraine), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15181, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15181, 2021.

EGU21-10616 | vPICO presentations | CL4.27

Global patterns of oceanic dust deposition during Pliocene-Pleistocene transitions

Oriol Teruel, Antoni Rosell-Melè, and Nuria Penalva-Arias

The is a mounting evidence that global emissions of dust were significantly higher during glacial than interglacial periods of the Pleistocene, and probably the Pliocene epochs. this pattern is observed in records from the low and mid latitudes, albeit with a varying degree of amplitude. During these time periods spanning 4 million years, the Earth climate underwent major transitions, such as the initiation of the Northern Hemisphere Glaciations and the Mid Pleistocene Transition. In parallel, dust transport and deposition on the oceans might have underwent stepwise increases, mainly during glacials. However, it is not clear yet if such changes are representative of global or regional climate response. Thus, dust records in marine sediments reflect changes in the different processes that drive the emission, transport, and deposition of dust on the oceans. In here, we report a compilation of marine dust records spanning the Pliocene-Pleistocene from all the major ocean basins. The synthesis of dust records on a global scale allows the identification of common patterns of variability and drivers. We analyse the data to infer changes in the global atmospheric circulation on orbital time scale, and to assess its meridional and zonal response during major climate transitions since the Pliocene.

How to cite: Teruel, O., Rosell-Melè, A., and Penalva-Arias, N.: Global patterns of oceanic dust deposition during Pliocene-Pleistocene transitions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10616, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10616, 2021.

CL4.30 – Climate change in the Mediterranean region: understanding the processes, assessing the impacts and designing adaptation

EGU21-6428 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30 | Highlight

Timing matters – the importance of “when” droughts and temperature anomalies occur in the Iberian Peninsula

Tarek EI-Madany, Arnaud Carrara, Gerardo Moreno, M. Pilar Martin, Javier Pacheco-Labrador, Ulrich Weber, Sebastian Sippel, Miguel Mahecha, Markus Reichstein, and Mirco Migliavacca

Mediterranean ecosystems and their different vegetation types are adapted to the annual cycle between wet and cool winter periods and dry and hot summers. Within this cycle, productivity is strongly driven by water availability but also temperature. With climate change, the Mediterranean area, and especially the Iberian Peninsula is expected to receive less precipitation. Future projections of temperature distributions of the Iberian Peninsula predict shifts toward a higher mean (+2 °C) and maximum (+4 °C) temperature. As a result, an increase in drought frequency and duration can be assumed. The response of the vegetation, especially with respect to the different components of the carbon cycle [net ecosystem exchange (NEE) and its components gross primary productivity (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (Reco)] and plant stress are still not well understood for these ecosystems. One of the biggest unknowns is the impact of the timing of temperature and precipitation anomalies on the carbon balances of these ecosystems.

We present results from different studies focusing on the Iberian Peninsula showing the importance of the timing of temperature and water availability anomalies and how they influence the carbon balance of those ecosystems. While the impact of a strong compound heat and drought event during the summer period had only a very small impact on the carbon balance of the ecosystem a positive temperature anomaly during the winter period of 2015/16 caused a strong increase in ecosystem productivity. The differences in the ecosystem responses are a result of the different ecosystem conditions and limitations. During summer the analyzed ecosystems are already under conditions of strong water limitation and reduced ecosystem productivity (senesced grass layer and stressed trees) and thus the response to the compound event was low. While during winter, large parts of the Iberian Peninsula are temperature limited, and increased temperatures relieved this limitation and increased LAI i.e. fraction of absorbed photosynthetic active radiation. On the other hand, the timing of precipitation, that controls the water availability in the soil during the spring and autumn periods have a large impact on the annual carbon balance of these ecosystems as they can reduce or increase the growing season length, and thus the carbon sequestration of these ecosystems. A recent study indicates that the impact of warm winters is not only increasing GPP but also Reco with important memory effects (i.e. increase of Reco later in the season). As a result, winter warming might lead to increased carbon uptake during winter but leads to a reduction in net carbon uptake for the whole year. Given the predictions of warming winters in the Mediterranean areas, this might cause more implications for the carbon balance as compared to summer heatwaves and droughts.

How to cite: EI-Madany, T., Carrara, A., Moreno, G., Martin, M. P., Pacheco-Labrador, J., Weber, U., Sippel, S., Mahecha, M., Reichstein, M., and Migliavacca, M.: Timing matters – the importance of “when” droughts and temperature anomalies occur in the Iberian Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6428, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6428, 2021.

EGU21-725 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30 | Highlight

The Mediterranean viticulture in response to global climate change drivers, the lesson of the past

Joel Guiot, Nicolas Bernigaud, Alberte Bondeau, and Laurent Bouby

Using a statistical emulator of a coupled climate-ecosystem model, this paper proposes a method to link the vine potential productivity and the viticulture extension in the Mediterranean area to global climate drivers, such as orbital parameters, solar and volcan activities and greenhouse gas concentrations. The emulator was calibrated on several tens of simulations of earth system models in various situations from the PMIP3 past (Last Glacial Maximum, Mid-Holocene, last millennium) and the CMIP5 future simulation up to 2100 under several RCP scenarios. The key climate variables produced by these simulations were introduced in an ecosystem model (BIOME4), so the ecosystem variables can be directly estimated from the global drivers. The large variation of situations used for calibration produces a robust emulator able to extrapolate to a large range of past and future climate states. Applied to the Mediterranean and European area, the emulator has been validated on several key periods of the past where the climate is known to have much changed. Finally, it was used to simulate the viticulture extension not only for these key past periods but also for different scenarios of the future, related to a global warming of 1.5°C, 2°C, 3°C and 5°C. Even if human groups are mainly responsible of viticulture extension, climate is a driver in the way that bad climate conditions may be a limit to extension or even a driver of regression.

The main findings are: (i) If the climate change projected for the future can be attributed to greenhouse gases increase as expected, the variations of the last millennia in the Mediterranean Basin can be attributed to the volcanic activity, the solar activity effect being negligeable; (ii) the effects of these volcanic forcing on the climate are not necessarily uniform across the basin and had a large impact on the viticulture as they were sufficiently important to be responsible of extension of viticulture on the whole Gaul during the Roman Climate Optimum; (iii) for the future, it is projected large difficulties for viticulture in Spain and North Africa. They will be particular important for a global warming of +3°C and more; (iv) there is little hope that an intense volcanic activity could slow down this regression.

How to cite: Guiot, J., Bernigaud, N., Bondeau, A., and Bouby, L.: The Mediterranean viticulture in response to global climate change drivers, the lesson of the past, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-725, 2021.

EGU21-1104 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Climate changes and Dynamics of the Agricultural Productions in the Mediterranean Region

Emilia Lamonaca and Fabio Gaetano Santeramo

Climate change has the potential to impact the agricultural sector. The impacts of climate change are likely to differ across producing regions of agricultural produce. Future climate scenarios may push some regions into climatic regimes favourable to agricultural production, with potential changes in areas planted with typical Mediterranean products. We examine which is the linkage between climate change and productivity levels in the selected agricultural sectors. Within the framework of agricultural supply response, we assume that acreage and yield are a function of climate change. We find that yield is affected by changes in temperatures and precipitations, with heterogeneous impacts. Acreage is also affected. The impacts vary across Mediterranean Regions, due to different specialisation and to the heterogeneity in climate between them.

How to cite: Lamonaca, E. and Santeramo, F. G.: Climate changes and Dynamics of the Agricultural Productions in the Mediterranean Region, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1104, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1104, 2021.

EGU21-4763 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30 | Highlight

The impact of climate change in wheat and barley yields in the Iberian Peninsula

Virgílio A. Bento, Andreia F.S. Ribeiro, Ana Russo, Célia M. Gouveia, Rita M. Cardoso, and Pedro M.M. Soares

World food and drink production largely depends on wheat and barley crops, which are the basis of nutrition for both humans and animals. The Iberian Peninsula (IP), and particularly Spain, is responsible for a large percentage of farming areas dedicated to these two crops. Furthermore, the IP is known as a prominent climate change hot spot, with expected rising temperatures and a decrease in mean precipitation (with more extreme events). Thus, it is vital to understand the effects of climate change in wheat and barley yields in the IP.

Multiple linear regression (MLR) models were developed based on the relation between temperature and precipitation and both crop yields, with the aim of projecting these into the future. Three main objectives were pursued: (1) to establish the existence of a relationship between wheat and barley yields and temperature and precipitation, taking advantage of data from the EURO-CORDEX regional climate models (RCMs) forced with ERA-Interim; (2) to calibrate and validate MLR models using a selection of predictors from the same EURO-CORDEX RCMs; and (3) to apply these MLR models to EURO-CORDEX RCMs forced with global climate models (GCMs) for an historical period (1971-2000) and two future periods (2041-2070 and 2071-2100) according to two greenhouse gas emission scenarios (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5). Results show a dichotomic behaviour of wheat and barley future yields depending on the crop’s production region. Projections for the southern cluster of the IP show severe yield losses for both cereals, which may be a consequence of the increase in maximum temperatures in spring, particularly for RCP8.5 at the end of the 21st century. Conversely, projections for the northern cluster of the IP show an increase in yield output, which may be a result of the projected warming taking place within the early winter months.

This study reinforces the worth to implementing changes in the society to mitigate losses and to assess production gains/losses due to climate change. These may be implemented locally (different cultivar species), countrywide (implementing sustainable policies), or even globally (alleviate greenhouse gas emissions). This work was supported by project IMPECAF (PTDC/CTA-CLI/28902/2017), LEADING (PTDC/CTA-MET/28914/2017) and by IDL (UIDB/50019/2020).

How to cite: Bento, V. A., Ribeiro, A. F. S., Russo, A., Gouveia, C. M., Cardoso, R. M., and Soares, P. M. M.: The impact of climate change in wheat and barley yields in the Iberian Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4763, 2021.

EGU21-13120 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30 | Highlight

Loss of climatic suitability for durum wheat production

Andrej Ceglar, Andrea Toreti, Matteo Zampieri, and Conxita Royo

Durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) is a minor cereal crop of key importance for making pasta, couscous, puddings, bread, and many other traditional foods, due to its physical and chemical characteristics. Durum wheat currently represents around 8% of the total wheat crop production, with the main cultivation region being concentrated in few suitable areas such as the Mediterranean Basin, the North American Great Plains, and the former USSR. The global demand for high-quality food made of durum wheat has been increasing, which poses a challenge in the face of climate change. The major share of durum wheat production is currently located in semi-arid climates, where the risk of climate extremes such as drought and heat stress will likely substantially increase in the future. 

We develop a global climate suitability model for durum wheat growth based on Support Vector Machines. We use CMIP6 data to assess the impact of climate change on future suitability for growing durum wheat globally. The total share of global arable land, climatically suitable for growing rainfed durum wheat, currently represents roughly 13% of the global arable land. However, climate change may decrease this suitable area of 19% by mid-century and of 48% by the end of the century, considering also the gain of suitable land areas, where durum wheat is not cultivated today. This net loss of suitable areas requires the development and the future adoption of effective and sustainable strategies to stabilize production and adapt the entire food supply chain.

How to cite: Ceglar, A., Toreti, A., Zampieri, M., and Royo, C.: Loss of climatic suitability for durum wheat production, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13120, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13120, 2021.

EGU21-5579 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

The impact of temperature and precipitation changes on honey bees (Apis mellifera) in the Aegean region under future climate scenarios

Tim van der Schriek, Gianna Kitsara, Konstantinos V. Varotsos, and Christos Giannakopoulos

The Aegean region (Greece) preserves a wide genetic diversity amongst the honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) of its many islands and supports an important bee keeping industry. However, sector-specific regional impact studies, based on the latest high-resolution regional climate models (RCMs), are urgently required for developing successful local adaptation strategies for beekeeping and to preserve biodiversity under future climate change scenarios.

We evaluated direct climate change impacts on honey bees in the Aegean region through novel threshold temperature and precipitation indices, linked to critical bee behavior and colony mortality. There are strong relationships between ambient temperature and key bee colony behavior such as, for example, nest thermo-humidity regulation, annual population variability and foraging. Additionally, dry conditions and heatwaves have been empirically linked to declines in colony food stores and increased colony mortality rates. Impact projections used simulated temperature and precipitation data from an ensemble of seven RCMs under the medium (RCP4.5) and high (RCP8.5) emission scenarios for the control- (1971-2000), near future- (2031-2060) and distant future (2071-2100) periods. Simulated data were bias-adjusted using the long-term meteorological record of Naxos Island (central Aegean).

Overheating in summer constitutes a major challenge to nest temperature regulation. Thermal and humidity conditions are well-regulated in bee nests given their importance for colony health. Brood must remain at 33-36 oC and experience high relative humidity for proper development. Bees tend to start cooling nests when ambient temperatures are >25 oC. Evaporative cooling using water is of critical importance with temperatures above 35 oC and is remarkably effective in stabilising nest temperature at 36 oC, even as ambient temperatures are >60 oC. Thermoregulation is highly demanding, and brood is mainly reared during optimum periods with no/low need of regulation. Sustained high temperatures >40-45 oC cause significant colony losses. The highest foraging activity takes place in the temperature range from 12-25 oC, whereas there is no activity <7 oC and >43 oC. Winter colony mortality rates increase when the spring flowering period experiences very low rainfall and extreme temperatures.

Future climatic change projections show significant increases in seasonal temperatures and days without precipitation, which will negatively affect the region’s bees. More frequent and severe heat-extremes will characterize seasons from spring to autumn, forcing bee colonies to cool their nests more intensively. Meanwhile, the availability of water and nectar (used for evaporative cooling) will decrease during extreme warm-dry events. The increase in heat extremes will likely lead to increased colony losses. Temperatures within the range for optimal foraging activity are less likely to occur during the flowering period. Finally, years with spring seasons characterized by very low rainfall and extreme temperatures will become more frequent in the future which may result in increased winter mortality rates.

How to cite: van der Schriek, T., Kitsara, G., Varotsos, K. V., and Giannakopoulos, C.: The impact of temperature and precipitation changes on honey bees (Apis mellifera) in the Aegean region under future climate scenarios, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5579, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5579, 2021.

The Mediterranean Basin is undergoing a warming trend with longer and warmer summers, an increase in the frequency and the severity of heat waves, changes in precipitation patterns and a reduction in rainfall amounts. This populated region is characterized by significant gaps in the socio-economic levels, parallel with population growth and migration, increased water demand and forest fires risk. Consequently, the vulnerability of the Mediterranean population to human health risks increases significantly as a result of climate change.

Climatic changes impact the health of the Mediterranean population directly through extreme heat, drought or storms, or indirectly by changes in water availability, food provision and quality, air pollution and other stressors. The main health effects are related to extreme weather events, changes in the distribution of climate-sensitive diseases (such as West Nile virus, chikungunya and zika) and changes in environmental and social conditions. The poorer countries, particularly in North Africa and the Levant, are at highest risk. Climate change affects the vulnerable sectors of the region, including an increasingly older population, with a larger percentage of those with chronic diseases, as well as poor people and migrants, which are therefore more susceptible to the effects of extreme temperatures. For those populations, a better surveillance and control systems are especially needed parallel with adaptation plans that become ever more imperative. In order to achieve these goals, it is essential to define indicators of vulnerability and exposure based on health impact assessment, as well as indicators that will promote adaptation planning and resilience for health risk management. In view of the climatic projections and the vulnerability of Mediterranean countries, such indicators will contribute to correct preparedness at the regional and national levels.

How to cite: Paz, S.: Impacts of climatic changes on the Mediterranean population: public health aspects, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1709, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1709, 2021.

EGU21-1946 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Climate change impacts on thermal comfort in one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world, Santorini Island, Greece

George Katavoutas, Dimitra Founda, Gianna Kitsara, and Christos Giannakopoulos

To date, climate change has caused serious problems both in human societies and in various ecosystems. Worldwide, the observed climate change hazards include increased droughts and floods, extreme heat waves, sea-level rise, storms and changes in natural land cover. Tourism, as an important pillar of the economy, is expected to be further affected until the end of the century by climate change hazards. An important factor in the selection of a tourist destination is the climatic conditions of the location.

This research aims to investigate the observed and projected heat stress conditions in a top world tourist destination, the island of Santorini, in Greece. The Mediterranean has been identified as a vulnerable region regarding the heat related risk. Simulations by Regional Climate Models downscaled over the island of Santorini were performed for the 1982–2005 control period, the near future period 2035–2058 and the distant future period 2075–2098. The data for the future simulations are under the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 future emissions scenarios. Thermal stress conditions were evaluated employing the Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI), which has a thermo-physiological basis and derived from the heat exchange theory between the thermal environment and the human body.

The analysis reveals that the thermal conditions in Santorini that cause moderate heat stress and strong heat stress are expected to increase in both RCPs scenarios in near and distant future. In particular, the exposure time under at least strong heat stress reaches 1.8% in the control period (1982–2005), increasing to 5.3% in the near future (2035–2058) and to 7.8% in the distant future (2075–2098) under the RCP4.5 scenario. In the distant future (2075–2098), under the RCP8.5 scenario, the exposure time under these conditions will exceed 12%.

The increasing heat related risk in one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world could be a wake-up call to the policy makers urging them to take prevention measures.

How to cite: Katavoutas, G., Founda, D., Kitsara, G., and Giannakopoulos, C.: Climate change impacts on thermal comfort in one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world, Santorini Island, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1946, 2021.

The environmental conditions in urban settings are subject to processes and conditions within cities, on the one hand, and have a strong bearing on the overall conditions and the quality of life of the cities’ inhabitants, on the other. The built environment, in general, and buildings and infrastructure, in particular, play a major role in shaping the urban environment. At the same time, environmental conditions affect strongly the conditions within and outside of buildings.

The continued growth of cities in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle Eastern (EMME) region, the demise of environmental quality adds to the challenges faced by their inhabitants. Of the many factors contributing to these threats, climate change and its amplification in urban structures, the increasing load of pollutants in air and water and the rising numbers of dust storms as well as the growing amount of solid and liquid waste stand out.

The significant increase in the number of cars and the rising quantity of energy production has contributed to ever-worsening air quality in EMME cities. More specifically, urban road transport represents one of the major sources of air-borne pollutants in many of these cities and causes substantial threats to the health of their inhabitants.

The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and the EMME region are major sources of desert dust storms that travel north and east to Europe and Asia, thereby strongly affecting cities and their air quality in the EMME. Dust storms and suspended bacteria and viruses pose serious consequences to communities in the EMME region and are likely to worsen due to ongoing climate change.

Present and future changes in climate conditions will have numerous adverse effects on the EMME region, in general, and on EMME cities, in particular. This includes extended heat waves as well as enhanced water scarcity for inhabitants and green spaces. In combination with poor air quality, this will cause severe health risks for urban populations as well as the need for increased and extended periods of space cooling in private, commercial and municipal buildings. The greater needs for water and energy in urban structures are interrelated and have been described by the Water-Energy Nexus. The higher demand for water is increasingly satisfied through desalination, which is particularly energy-intensive. The need for additional space cooling during hot spells in cities will require more electricity.

The high rate of population growth, ever-increasing urbanization, changes in lifestyles and economic expansion in the EMME countries result in steadily increasing volumes of solid and liquid waste. The waste problems are exacerbated by the rising number of displaced persons and refugees in growing camps in some of the EMME countries, particularly, in Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon. The huge quantity of daily produced sewage sludge in Middle Eastern countries presents a serious challenge due to its high treatment costs and risks to the environment and human health.

This paper will address some of these challenges, which call for holistic and interdisciplinary efforts to design effective and sustainable adaptation strategies in EMME cities.

How to cite: Lange, M. A.: Current Threats to the Environmental Conditions in Cities of the Eastern Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10195, 2021.

Turkey is a part of Eastern Mediterranean and located between 36-42° North latitudes and 26-45° East longitudes, where Europe meets Asia. The country, which mostly comprises the Anatolian Peninsula, is unique in terms of geographical position and topography and occupies a region which is highly sensitive to climate change. Considering that the region is prone to drying as a result of climate change, inferences about future precipitation patterns is of value.

Studies conducted by cosmogenic surface dating of boulder moraines revealed that, during Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 21 Ka), the precipitation at the southwest of Anatolian Peninsula was higher than today, and at the northeast it was lower than today, which implies a regional heterogeneity. On the other hand, future projections of precipitation point out reverse conditions. That is, there will be lower (higher) than today precipitation at the southwest (northeast) of the country. Namely, a seesaw of precipitation variability prevails between cold climate of LGM and warm climate of future.

As a highland located at mid-latitudes, Anatolian Peninsula takes most of the precipitation during winter. What mainly drives the changes in winter precipitation is the changes in atmospheric circulation. Model simulations reveal a southward and northward displacement of polar jet stream and consistent shifts of storm tracks during LGM and in the future respectively. Knowing this fact, we investigated directions of winds which carry precipitation into Anatolian Peninsula, for the sake of explaining the dominant regional mechanism related to abovementioned seesaw pattern of precipitation.

We utilized monthly 850 hPa wind and precipitation data from the outputs of CCSM4.0 model of CMIP5 project and analyzed winds for past (LGM), present time and future conditions. Considering that it produces opposite conditions with comparable magnitudes with LGM, we used the RCP8.5 scenario. We found out that the 850 hPa winds entering from west into the peninsula are becoming more zonal (less tilted) as time passes from LGM to future. In other words, southwesterly winds evolve into westerly ones with a slight clockwise change of wind direction. This change considered together with orography of the peninsula explains the seesaw of precipitation variability over Anatolian Peninsula between cold and warm phases of global climate.

How to cite: boza, B., ezber, Y., and şen, Ö. l.: Seesaw of Precipitation Variability over Anatolian Peninsula between LGM and Future Projections: A Possible Role of Wind Direction Change, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3843, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3843, 2021.

EGU21-6358 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

An Assessment of Observed and Simulated Temperature Variability in Sierra de Guadarrama (Spain)

Cristina Vegas Cañas, J. Fidel González Rouco, Jorge Navarro Montesinos, Elena García Bustamante, Etor E. Lucio Eceiza, Félix García Pereira, Ernesto Rodríguez Camino, Andrés Chazarra Bernabé, and Inés Álvarez Arévalo

This work provides a first assessment of temperature variability from interannual to multidecadal timescales in Sierra de Guadarrama, located in central Spain, from observations and regional climate model (RCM) simulations. Observational data are provided by the Guadarrama Monitoring Network (GuMNet; www.ucm.es/gumnet) at higher altitudes, up to 2225 masl, and by the Spanish Meteorological Agency (AEMet) at lower sites. An experiment at high horizontal resolution of 1 km using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) RCM, feeding from ERA Interim inputs, is used. Through model-data comparison, it is shown that the simulations are annually and seasonally highly representative of the observations, although there is a tendency in the model to underestimate observational temperatures, mostly at high altitudes. Results show that WRF provides an added value in relation to the reanalysis, with improved correlation and error metrics relative to observations.

The analysis of temperature trends shows a warming in the area during the last 20 years, very significant in autumn. When spanning the analysis to the whole observational period, back to the beginning of the 20th century at some sites, significant annual and seasonal temperature increases of 1℃/decade develop, most of them happening during de 1970s, although not as intense as during the last 20 years.

The temporal variability of temperature anomalies in the Sierra de Guadarrama is highly correlated with the temperatures in the interior of the Iberian Peninsula. This relationship can be extended broadly over south-western Europe.

How to cite: Vegas Cañas, C., González Rouco, J. F., Navarro Montesinos, J., García Bustamante, E., Lucio Eceiza, E. E., García Pereira, F., Rodríguez Camino, E., Chazarra Bernabé, A., and Álvarez Arévalo, I.: An Assessment of Observed and Simulated Temperature Variability in Sierra de Guadarrama (Spain), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6358, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6358, 2021.

EGU21-7020 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Recent Changes in the Rain Regime in Israel 1975-2020

Baruch Ziv, Ron Drori, Hadas Saaroni, Adi Etkin, and Efrat Sheffer

Previous observation analyses have shown a declining rainfall trend over Israel, mostly statistically insignificant. These findings support the projections of the climatic models for the 21th century. The current study, for the period 1975-2020, undermines these findings, and the alarming future projections, and elaborates changes in the distribution of the rain along the rainy season.

The annual rainfall has a negligible trend, of +0.002%/decade, the number of rainy days has declined by -1.9%/decade and the average daily rainfall has increased by +2.1%/decade, all statistically insignificant. In the mid-winter both rainfall and daily rain intensity increased, while these variables have declined in the autumn and spring. The implied contraction of the rainy season is estimated by 2 measures. The 'effective length', which is determined by the time between accumulation of 10% and 90% of the annual rainfall, lasting 112 days on the average. This has been shortened by seven days during the study period. The other is the Seasonality Index (SI), reflecting the temporal concentration of the rainy season around its center. The trend found indicates that the regional climate is shifting from being between 'Markedly seasonal with a long dry season' and 'Most rain in ≤3 months', further toward the latter.

The trend in Cyprus Low occurrence and in the Mediterranean Oscillation Index were found to explain the rainfall trends only partially. We suggest that the cause for the increase in the mid-winter rain intensity is the increase in sea-surface temperature, found over the east Mediterranean, and for the decline in the transition seasons, to the poleward expansion of the subtropical highs. The contraction of the rainy season on the one hand, and the increased daily rain intensity in the mid-winter on the other, have ecological and hydrological impacts in this vulnerable region. 

How to cite: Ziv, B., Drori, R., Saaroni, H., Etkin, A., and Sheffer, E.: Recent Changes in the Rain Regime in Israel 1975-2020, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7020, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7020, 2021.

EGU21-8729 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Applicability of the North Sea Caspian Pattern as an indicator of the Euro-Mediterranean Climate Variability

Ferat Çağlar, Omer Yetemen, Kwok Pan Chun, and Omer Lutfi Sen

Climate variability related to trough locations in the Euro-Mediterranean region is determined by various semi-permanent pressure centers of teleconnections and synoptic features. These features are resulted from the interactions between mesoscale and global-scale patterns from sub-seasonal to decadal scales. The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and the Arctic Oscillation (AO) are the most common teleconnection patterns for depicting climate anomalies in this region. However, their skills for predicting climate anomalies gradually decays towards Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean.

The North Sea Caspian Pattern (NCP) is a middle troposphere teleconnection between the North Sea and the Caspian Sea. The skill of the suggested NCP index was tested for temperature and precipitation fields in the Eastern Mediterranean, and significant correlations were found particularly with temperature fields. The index had limited utilization because it was believed that the index could not represent precipitation anomalies well in the region.

We aimed to assess the competence of the NCP on indicating climate variability in a broader region. For this purpose, a high resolution, spatially continuous, and homogeneous data was needed. The European Center for Middle-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) ERA5 reanalysis data was chosen for investigating monthly total precipitation, mean air temperature at 2-m height and 500 hPa mean geopotential fields for the period of 1950-2019. We produced correlation and composite maps of temperature, precipitation, and geopotential for the NCP and other common indices in the region. There were significant differences between the negative and positive phases of the NCP in Western Europe and the Caucasus regions. These areas coincided with the edges of the Mediterranean Trough. To understand the working mechanism of the index, cross-correlations between other indices were calculated. The Mediterranean Trough Displacement index showed significant positive correlations with the NCP, which indicates that the east-west migration of the through might have a significant effect on the strength of the NCP. Composite maps of mean geopotential height differences also provided support for this finding. Since the identified poles of the NCP are along both latitudinal and longitudinal directions, the NCP is sensitive to zonal and meridional circulation features.  For the areas with significant composite differences of temperature and precipitation, the skill of the NCP for predicting climate anomalies is comparable to the skills of the AO and the NAO.

We found strong evidence that the NCP is adequate for indicating not only monthly temperature but also precipitation anomalies particularly in Northwestern Europe and the Caucasus regions. 

This study is supported by the 2232 International Fellowship for Outstanding Researchers Program of the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) under grant 118C329. The financial support from TUBITAK does not mean that the content of the publication reflects the approved scientific view of TUBITAK.

How to cite: Çağlar, F., Yetemen, O., Chun, K. P., and Sen, O. L.: Applicability of the North Sea Caspian Pattern as an indicator of the Euro-Mediterranean Climate Variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8729, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8729, 2021.

EGU21-1599 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Climate Change Impacts on a Mediterranean Coastal Wetland due to Sea Level Rise (L’Albufera de Valencia, Spain)

Clara E Estrela Segrelles, Miguel Ángel Pérez Martín, and Gabriel Gómez Martínez

Sea level rise produced by climate change severely affects coastal ecosystems. The increase in the area below sea level facilitates the penetration of the marine wedge and causes an increase in soil salinity. Coastal wetlands are areas of great ecological importance due to the richness of flora and fauna that inhabit them. A change in salinity conditions could lead to a reduction or loss of habitat for the wetland biota. Based on RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 CMIP5 multimodel scenarios, in the Western Mediterranean coast, the sea level will rise 0.16 m in the short term (2026 - 2045) and 0.79 m in 2100. Also, high-end scenarios indicate that sea level will rise between 1.35 m and 1.92 m in the long term.

A sea level rise analysis has been developed in the coastal wetlands of Júcar River Basin District (JRBD). The results show that coastal wetlands are the mainly area affected in the JRBD, so the 90% of the area under the sea level are wetlands. L’Albufera de Valencia is the main wetland in this basin and, also the main wetland affected. It is an anthropized humid zone, regulated by users through gates to preserve the adequate water level for agricultural and environmental purposes such as rice cultivation around the lake and bird habitats conservation, especially in winter. The outcome of the study shows a significative increase in the area below the sea from 507 ha and 4.2 hm3 of water volume at present to 3,244 ha that represents 42.6 hm3 of water volume in the short term. In the long term, the area below the sea is 7,253 ha which means 118.4 hm3 of water volume in the percentile 50 scenario and, in the worst extreme scenario, it is 13,896 ha that represents 289.7 hm3 of water volume. This leads to a redefinition of the lake management levels as a climate change adaptation measure to prevent the lake salinization and severe impacts in the lake ecosystem. L’Albufera lake levels need to be increased in the next years to avoid the sea water penetration, related to the sea level rise. Thus, in the short term the lake levels must be increased around 0.16 m and, in the long term, L’Albufera levels must be increased around 0.8 m.

How to cite: Estrela Segrelles, C. E., Pérez Martín, M. Á., and Gómez Martínez, G.: Climate Change Impacts on a Mediterranean Coastal Wetland due to Sea Level Rise (L’Albufera de Valencia, Spain), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1599, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1599, 2021.

EGU21-9907 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

EM-MHeatWaves: Eastern Mediterranean marine heatwaves - Ocean responses to atmospheric forcing and impacts on marine ecosystems

Elena Xoplaki, Elina Tragou, Alexandra Gogou, Vassilis Zervakis, Drosos Koutsoubas, Lorine Behr, Stamatis Petalas, and Maria Sini

Even before the introduction of the term “Marine Heat Wave” (MHW) and its statistical definition in global-scale studies, the scientific community had studied and recorded potentially harmful impacts of persistent conditions of warm surface layers and highly stratified water columns on the marine ecosystem. The main triggers for MHWs are yet not well understood and the current knowledge is mainly based on mass mortalities linked to temperature anomalies. EM-MHeatWaves is an interdisciplinary, collaborative, DAAD/IKYDA funded research project that investigates the atmospheric forcing, oceanic circulation and ecosystem response of MHWs in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea over the past 35 years. Two universities (Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, University of the Aegean) and one research center (Hellenic Centre for Marine Research) re-examine the definition of MHWs with emphasis on the Eastern Mediterranean by applying a holistic approach that includes reverse-engineering using model data and reanalysis covering the period 1985 to 2014. We focus on the Eastern Mediterranean because of the high sensitivity of the basin’s ecosystem to atmospheric and marine warming events, the invasion of tropical alien (Lessepsian) species, the characteristic oceanic circulation with the Eastern Mediterranean Transient events, the exchange with the Black Sea through the Turkish Strait System as well as the coastal upwelling areas. In order to study the spatiotemporal characteristics of Eastern Mediterranean MHWs we work towards a better understanding of the oceanographic processes as well as of the compounding character of the atmospheric contribution. Based on the response of marine biogeochemical cycles (depletion of subsurface oxygen levels, observed changes in the mixed layer and chlorophyll maxima depths, nutrient stoichiometries, carbon uptake and sequestration rates) and their impacts on ecosystems (i.e. shifts in planktonic and benthic community regimes, mass mortality events, disease outbreaks, etc.), triggered by the rise of ocean temperatures, we study the statistical characteristics of the oceanic temperatures and assess the corresponding ocean circulation, the synchronous and lagged contribution of the large scale atmospheric circulation. We further study the signature of these extreme Mediterranean MHW events in future projections from model runs with respect to duration, severity and spatial extent and compare them to reanalysis.   
EM-MHeatWaves aims at strengthening the partnership between the German and Greek institutions by conducting joint research at a high scientific level.

How to cite: Xoplaki, E., Tragou, E., Gogou, A., Zervakis, V., Koutsoubas, D., Behr, L., Petalas, S., and Sini, M.: EM-MHeatWaves: Eastern Mediterranean marine heatwaves - Ocean responses to atmospheric forcing and impacts on marine ecosystems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9907, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9907, 2021.

EGU21-2240 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Rapid changes in primary productivity and oxygen depletion during sapropel deposition: implications for reconstructing seawater oxygen levels

Ricardo D. Monedero-Contreras, Francisca Martinez-Ruiz, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, David Gallego-Torres, and Gert de Lange

The deposition of Organic-Rich Layers (ORLs) and sapropels in the Mediterranean Sea basins represents an exceptional record of severe changes in oxygenation over the recent geological past. Such changes are also associated to rapid productivity oscillations that involved a major increase in export fluxes of organic carbon. These episodes of enhanced production and preservation of organic matter can be used as a natural archive for studying oxygen fluctuations and deoxygenation events, and a better comprehension of the causes and consequences of past events will provide valuable information to further understand oxygen level variations in future scenarios. In general, sapropel deposition has been related to increased productivity and sluggish water circulation in response to African monsoon variability. To further understand how such conditions led to bottom water oxygen depletion, a multiproxy approach, including diverse geochemical and ichnological proxies, has been applied. Obtained results have provided new insights into the relationship between productivity and oxygen conditions in the water column and at the sediment-water interface. Sapropels intervals from cores recovered at four ODP Leg 160 sites were selected across an East-West transect of the Eastern Mediterranean basin entailing diverse depths and oceanographic regimes. At these sites, sapropel layers had been well characterized in terms of productivity (i.e. Ba/Al and TOC), and new analyses have been performed to provide additional redox proxies, i.e. degree of pyritization (DOP), trace elements ratios, and enrichment factors (EF) that have allowed a high-resolution reconstruction of bottom-water ventilation. Also, a preliminary ichnological approach is coupled with the geochemical information to assess the response of the macrobenthic trace maker community to the redox changes at the sediment-water interface. Trace metal proxies indicate a significant, though variable, decreasing oxygenation during sapropel deposition, also supported by important pyritization within sapropel layers.

How to cite: Monedero-Contreras, R. D., Martinez-Ruiz, F., Rodríguez-Tovar, F. J., Gallego-Torres, D., and de Lange, G.: Rapid changes in primary productivity and oxygen depletion during sapropel deposition: implications for reconstructing seawater oxygen levels, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2240, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2240, 2021.

EGU21-8787 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

Mechanisms of heat storage and trend in the Mediterranean Sea in a high emission CMIP6 scenario with the regional climate system model CNRM-RCSM6.

Florence Sevault, Robin Waldman, Samuel Somot, and Pierre Nabat

The Earth’s climate is regulated by the ocean, which absorbs, transports and releases heat through continuous exchanges with the atmosphere. In regional climate modelling, an increasing consensus has emerged on the added value of ocean-atmosphere coupled systems to allow for these exchanges, through interactive and realistic air-sea interactions. This coupling is controlled by the Sea Surface Temperature (SST), itself regulated by the capacity for the ocean component to store heat at depth.

We address here the question of heat storage and trend in the different depths of the Mediterranean Sea in a CMIP6 historical and SSP5-8.5 scenario with the Regional Climate System Model CNRM-RCSM6 driven by CNRM-ESM2-1 simulation. CNRM-RCSM6 is composed by ALADIN-Climate at a 12 km resolution for the atmosphere, with the interactive aerosol scheme TACTIC and the multi-surface model SURFEX v8, CTRIP at a 50 km resolution for the river routing with deep drainage, flood plains, and the lake parametrization FLAKE, NEMOMED12 at a 6 km resolution for the ocean, and OASIS3-MCT for a 1hr-coupling of the four models. The simulation begins in 1979 after 79 years of coupled spin-up, and a control simulation also exists.

We investigate the timing, location and magnitude of heat storage by the Mediterranean Sea. In particular, we assess the link between SST warming and vertical heat storage, and its possible seasonality. We illustrate the sensitivity of heat storage to salinity trends by comparing the western and eastern Mediterranean behaviours. Finally, we make use of an online heat trend diagnostic tool to characterize the dominant mechanisms of ocean heat storage in the Mediterranean Sea.

How to cite: Sevault, F., Waldman, R., Somot, S., and Nabat, P.: Mechanisms of heat storage and trend in the Mediterranean Sea in a high emission CMIP6 scenario with the regional climate system model CNRM-RCSM6., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8787, 2021.

EGU21-12952 | vPICO presentations | CL4.30

High Resolution Paleoclimate Simulations with the COSMO-CLM Model in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East

Eva Hartmann, Mingyue Zhang, Elena Xoplaki, and Sebastian Wagner

The Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East region is influenced by multiple large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns including the Indian Summer Monsoon the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the East Atlantic / Western Russia and Scandinavian patterns. The area offers a broad spectrum, both in time and space, of long high-quality instrumental time series, documentary information and natural archives. Yet, recent reviews revealed that paleoclimate modelling with low horizontal resolution cannot fully help to understand the interactions of the multiple atmospheric patterns, the Mediterranean SSTs and connect potential climate impacts that may trigger or contribute to major social-historical events. Thus, there is a need to integrate high-resolution regional climate modelling into paleo applications. Furthermore, such integration will close the gap between the coarse resolution of climate models and the regional to local scale that is covered by the proxy and historical evidence and will enable a better data-model comparison. We use the regional climate model COSMO-CLM (CCLM) in an adjusted (orbital, solar and volcanic forcing, greenhouse gas concentrations and land-use changes) paleoclimate version. Simulations are performed with 0.44° and 0.11° spatial resolution on a domain including the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East in time slices of the past 2000 years. Simulations of the present (1979-2019) with this paleoclimate version of CCLM forced by ERA-Interim reanalysis data have shown promising results compared to observational and reanalysis data sets. The mean annual cycles of precipitation and temperature of the Mediterranean are correctly shown with high temperatures and low precipitation during the summer months and lower temperatures and higher precipitation during the winter months. Additionally, the effect of climate change is simulated with increasing temperatures during the last 40 years. Simulations of the present (1979-2019) and past periods (525-575 CE and 1220-1290 CE) forced by the MPI-ESM-LR ‘past2k’ simulations performed under the CMIP6 protocol will be performed at the next step and first results will be shown in the frame of this conference. The periods are chosen because of high volcanic activity and to study the volcanic influence on climate. Those results are going to be used to link historical events with the regional climate and contribute to a better understanding of the indirect and complex association between climate and society.

How to cite: Hartmann, E., Zhang, M., Xoplaki, E., and Wagner, S.: High Resolution Paleoclimate Simulations with the COSMO-CLM Model in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12952, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12952, 2021.

CL4.31 – Climate Variability and Prediction in High Latitudes

EGU21-351 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Impact of Boreal Autumn Antarctic Oscillation on Winter Wet and Cold Weather in East Asia

Zhengxuan Yuan, Jun Qin, Shuanglin Li, Sijing Huang, Yassin Mbululo, and Akhtar Rehman

The Antarctic Oscillation (AAO) is the dominant mode of the southern extratropical atmospheric mass variability which has potential influences on the Northern Hemisphere (NH). This study reveals a significantly negative correlation between the September-October (SO) AAO index and the occurrence rate of following January-February (JF) wet and cold weather in the Middle and Lower Reaches of Yangtze River Basin (MLRY) in China. The latter is quantified by a Precipitation-Temperature (PT) Index. JF PT is modulated by both northerly air flow in the lower troposphere and southerly air flow in the lower-middle troposphere. The SO AAO stimulates Southern Ocean Dipole (SOD) pattern-like SST anomalies, which induces a North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)-like atmospheric response in the following JF through ocean-air interaction. As for the northerly flow, the JF NAO-like pattern triggers an eastward propagating wave train, influencing the intensity of East Asian Winter Monsoon (EAWM) and subsequently the northerly cold flow to MLRY. As for southerly flow, the variation of JF SOD regulates the local meridional cell, in turn modulating the Middle East Jet Stream (MEJS) along with the NAO-like pattern, influencing the intensity of precipitation and the wet and warm flow over Southern China and the adjacent regions. In addition to the tropospheric processes, the stratospheric Quasi Biennial Oscillation (QBO) serves as the ‘bridge’ for linking SOD to NH climate, inducing the JF PT response to SOD SST. To summarize, SO AAO affects the JF PT in MLRY by modulating both cold-dry northerly air flow and warm-wet southerly air flow through ocean-atmosphere interactions and stratospheric pathway.

How to cite: Yuan, Z., Qin, J., Li, S., Huang, S., Mbululo, Y., and Rehman, A.: Impact of Boreal Autumn Antarctic Oscillation on Winter Wet and Cold Weather in East Asia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-351, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-351, 2021.

EGU21-2528 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Role of the internal climate variability in the atmospheric response to a sudden summer Arctic sea ice loss

Steve Delhaye, Thierry Fichefet, François Massonnet, David Docquier, Christopher Roberts, Sarah Keeley, Retish Senan, Rym Msadek, Svenya Chripko, Javier García-Serrano, and Pierre-Antoine Bretonnière

The retreat of Arctic sea ice for the last four decades is a primary manifestation of the climate system response to increasing atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. This retreat is frequently considered as a possible driver of atmospheric circulation anomalies at mid-latitudes. However, the year-to-year evolution of the Arctic sea ice cover is also characterized by significant fluctuations attributed to internal climate variability. It is unclear how the atmosphere will respond to a near-total retreat of summer Arctic sea ice, a reality that might occur in the foreseeable future. This study uses sensitivity experiments  with higher and lower horizontal resolution configurations of three global coupled climate models to investigate the local and remote atmospheric responses to a reduction in Arctic sea ice cover during the preceding summer. Recognizing that these responses likely depend on the model itself and on its horizontal resolution, and that the model’s internally-generated climate variability may obscure the atmospheric response, we design a protocol to compare each source separately. After imposing a 15-month albedo perturbation resulting in a sudden summer Arctic sea ice loss, the remote mid-latitude climate response has a very low signal-to-noise ratio such that internal climate variability dominates the uncertainty of the response, regardless of the atmospheric variable. Indeed, more than 28, 165 and 210 members are needed to detect a robust response in surface air temperature, precipitation and sea level pressure to sea ice loss in Europe, respectively. Finally, we find that horizontal resolution plays a secondary role in the uncertainty of the atmospheric response to substantial perturbation of Arctic sea ice. These findings suggest that even with higher resolution model configurations, it is important to have large ensemble sizes to increase the signal to noise ratio for the mid-latitude atmospheric response to sea ice changes.

How to cite: Delhaye, S., Fichefet, T., Massonnet, F., Docquier, D., Roberts, C., Keeley, S., Senan, R., Msadek, R., Chripko, S., García-Serrano, J., and Bretonnière, P.-A.: Role of the internal climate variability in the atmospheric response to a sudden summer Arctic sea ice loss, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2528, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2528, 2021.

EGU21-2590 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Sea ice and atmospheric potential predictability in coupled GCMs

Daniela Flocco, Ed Hawkins, Leandro Ponsoni, François Massonnett, Daniel Feltham, and Thierry Fichefet

Assimilation of sea ice concentration satellite products has successfully been used to initialize sea ice models and coupled NWP systems. Sea-ice thickness observations, being much less mature, are typically not assimilated. However, many studies suggest that initialization of winter sea-ice thickness could lead to improved prediction of Arctic summer sea ice. We have examined the potential for sea ice thickness observations to improve forecast skill on timescales from days to a year ahead in two state-of-the-art coupled GCMs.

Here we examine the influence of Arctic sea-ice thickness observations on the potential predictability of the sea-ice and atmospheric circulation using idealised ‘data denial’ experiments. We perform paired sets of ensembles with the HadGEM3 and EC-Earth GCMs using different initial conditions retrieved from present-day control runs.

One set of ensembles start with complete information about the sea-ice conditions and is treated as “truth”, and one set has degraded sea ice information. We investigate how the pairs of ensembles, all started in January, predict the subsequent evolution of the sea-ice state, sea level pressure and circulation within the Arctic with the aim of quantifying the value of sea-ice observations for improving predictions.

We show that accurate initialization of sea ice thickness improves the model prediction skill during the first month of simulation and that several sea ice state and atmospheric variables present a re-emergence of skill in September. Prediction skill of several oceanic variables is also observed. The two models present a good agreement in terms of the regions where they show either a skill gain or loss.

How to cite: Flocco, D., Hawkins, E., Ponsoni, L., Massonnett, F., Feltham, D., and Fichefet, T.: Sea ice and atmospheric potential predictability in coupled GCMs, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2590, 2021.

EGU21-3270 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Exploring the influence of the North Pacific Ocean Rossby wave sources on interannual variability of summer precipitation and surface temperature over the Northern Hemisphere

Ramón Fuentes-Franco, Torben Koenigk, David Docquier, Federico Graef, and Klaus Wyser

The influence of Rossby wave sources (RWS) emitted on the Northeastern Pacific Ocean (NePO) in the Northern Hemisphere during summer is analysed in the ERA5 reanalysis and a large ensemble performed with the EC-Earth3 model. Using extreme years composites of precipitation, surface temperature and geopotential height, we found a causal influence of the Rossby waves generated over the NePO on a global climate response. Both the reanalysis ERA5 and the EC-Earth3 large ensemble show that RWS triggers wave-like patterns arising from the upper troposphere NePO region. We show that an increased Rossby wave sources intensity is related with a) negative temperature anomalies over western North America, b) positive temperature anomalies over eastern North America, c) increased precipitation over Northern Europe during summer and d) sea-ice concentration decrease in the Arctic.  We also show that the North Atlantic plays a very important role hindering or permitting that Rossby waves generated in the Pacific reach the Atlantic and modulate the atmospheric conditions over Europe. Such conditions were found in ERA5 and EC-Earth3 large ensemble during colder and icier conditions over the North Atlantic.

How to cite: Fuentes-Franco, R., Koenigk, T., Docquier, D., Graef, F., and Wyser, K.: Exploring the influence of the North Pacific Ocean Rossby wave sources on interannual variability of summer precipitation and surface temperature over the Northern Hemisphere, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3270, 2021.

EGU21-3638 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Improved sea-ice prediction in the Weddell Sea using sea-ice thickness initialization

Yushi Morioka, Doroteaciro Iovino, Andrea Cipollone, Simona Masina, and Swadhin Behera

Skillful sea-ice prediction in the Antarctic Ocean remains a big challenge due to paucity of sea-ice observations and insufficient representation of sea-ice processes in climate models. This study demonstrates that the Antarctic sea-ice concentration (SIC) prediction is significantly improved using a coupled general circulation model (SINTEX-F2) in which the model’s SIC and sea-ice thickness (SIT) are initialized with the ocean/sea-ice reanalysis product (C-GLORSv7). It is found that the wintertime SIT initialization adds positive values to the prediction skills of the summertime SIC, most effectively in the Weddell Sea where the SIT climatology and variability are the largest among the Antarctic Seas. Examination of the SIT balance during low sea-ice years of the Weddell Sea shows that negative SIT anomalies initialized in June retain the memory throughout austral winter (July-September) owing to horizontal advection of the SIT anomalies by sea-ice velocities. The negative SIT anomalies continue to develop in austral spring (October-December) owing to more incoming solar radiation via ice-albedo feedback and the associated warming of mixed layer. This results in further sea-ice decrease during austral summer (January-March). Concomitantly, the model reasonably reproduces atmospheric circulation anomalies in the Amundsen-Bellingshausen Seas as well as the Weddell Sea during the development of the negative sea-ice anomalies. These results provide solid evidence that the wintertime SIT initialization benefits skillful summertime sea-ice prediction in the Antarctic Seas.

How to cite: Morioka, Y., Iovino, D., Cipollone, A., Masina, S., and Behera, S.: Improved sea-ice prediction in the Weddell Sea using sea-ice thickness initialization, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3638, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3638, 2021.

EGU21-7251 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

A mechanism predicting the climate response to sea ice loss from its geometry

Xavier Levine, Ivana Cvijanovic, Pablo Ortega, Markus Donat, and Etienne Tourigny

As climate warms sea ice loss may become a potent climate change feedback, both in the Arctic and at lower latitudes. For instance, extreme events over Europe and North America, such as drought or warm spells, have been attributed to sea ice minima in recent years. Yet a comprehensive understanding of the local or remote impact of sea ice loss on climate is lacking, with the predicted atmospheric and oceanic response to sea ice loss differing between climate studies. In particular, the impact of varying geographical distribution of sea ice loss on regional climatic changes remains uncertain.

Here, we assess the sensitivity of the atmospheric response to various patterns of sea ice loss, at a pan-Arctic or regional scale, by analyzing a set of idealised AMIP-like simulations. Depending on where sea ice is reduced, we find that climatic anomalies can vary widely among experiments, especially the zonal-mean component of the tropospheric circulation: for instance, the subpolar jet and polar cell can strengthen or weaken with sea ice loss, depending on its geographical distribution. We demonstrate that the geometry of the sea ice loss, in particular the degree to which sea ice extent changes is zonally symmetric or asymmetric, controls this disparate climatic response through an atmospheric feedback mechanism. In this feedback mechanism, changes in poleward eddy heat flux and latent heat release over the Arctic in response to a specific sea ice loss pattern can either warm or cool the Arctic troposphere. We discuss the implications of our results for interpreting the apparent discrepancies in the climate response to Arctic sea ice variability among studies.

How to cite: Levine, X., Cvijanovic, I., Ortega, P., Donat, M., and Tourigny, E.: A mechanism predicting the climate response to sea ice loss from its geometry, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7251, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7251, 2021.

EGU21-7586 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Does CMIP6 better constrain projections of 21st century Antarctic sea ice loss?

Caroline Holmes, Tom Bracegirdle, and Paul Holland

Results from CMIP5 have previously suggested that ensemble regression techniques or model selection may provide solutions to the challenge of making projections of future Antarctic sea ice area (SIA) in the presence of large historical biases. Here, we revisit and extend such analysis incorporating the CMIP6 ensemble, which shows modest improvements in some aspects of sea ice simulation and in particular a reduction of inter-model spread in historical SIA. We focus on the strongest forcing scenarios analysed, CMIP5 RCP85 and CMIP6 SSP5.85.

In summer (February) the historical climatology of SIA is a strong linear constraint on projections of SIA in both generations. This is because the strong forcing leads to the loss of the majority of summer SIA in each model, so that the models that start with greater SIA exhibit greater reductions. Differences between CMIP5 and CMIP6 are largely explained by the fact that, compared to CMIP6, CMIP5 contains many more models that have very large positive biases in historical SIA and do not lose the majority of ice.

In winter (September), a much smaller proportion of SIA is lost, but inter-model spread in SIA climatology still explains just under half the variance in projections of SIA change, in both CMIP5 and CMIP6. The mean historical winter climatology is similar between generations, as is the regression slope of SIA change against SIA climatology.  However, there is a greater reduction of SIA in CMIP6 than CMIP5. We find this to be statistically related to greater global mean warming in CMIP6 than CMIP5, and therefore potentially to the larger climate sensitivity in the CMIP6 ensemble.

These findings imply that, depending on season, a different balance of local (SIA climatology) and global (GMST change) drivers can be used to explain the inter-model and inter-generation spread in projections of SIA loss. They also firmly tie our ability to project Antarctic SIA loss to our understanding of the fidelity of higher CMIP6 climate sensitivity. Questions remain about whether models are correct in their simulation of Antarctic SIA sensitivity to global surface temperature.

How to cite: Holmes, C., Bracegirdle, T., and Holland, P.: Does CMIP6 better constrain projections of 21st century Antarctic sea ice loss?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7586, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7586, 2021.

The possibility that Arctic sea ice loss could weaken mid-latitude westerlies and promote more severe cold winters has sparked more than a decade of scientific debate, with support from observations but inconclusive modelling evidence. Here we analyse a large multi-model ensemble of coordinated experiments from the Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project and find that the modelled response is proportional to the simulated eddy momentum feedback, and that this is underestimated in all models. Hence, we derive an observationally constrained model response showing a modest weakening of mid-latitude tropospheric and stratospheric winds, an equatorward shift of the Atlantic and Pacific storm tracks, and a negative North Atlantic Oscillation. Although our constrained response is consistent with observed relationships which have weakened recently, we caution that emergent constraints may only provide a lower bound.

How to cite: Smith, D. and the PAMIP: Observationally constrained multi-model atmospheric response to future Arctic sea ice loss , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9633, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9633, 2021.

EGU21-10260 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

The roles of winds and waves in Arctic sea ice variability

Lettie Roach, Edward Blanchard-Wrigglesworth, and Cecilia Bitz

It is broadly accepted that variability and trends in Arctic sea ice remain poorly simulated even in the most state-of-the-art coupled climate and climate prediction models. Here, we show that a modern coupled climate model (CESM1) is in fact able to reproduce the observed variability and decline in summer sea ice when winds are nudged towards values from reanalysis.  We argue that the nudged-winds framework provides a straightforward way of evaluating models by removing much of the contribution of internal variability, revealing model successes and biases. The results demonstrate the importance of atmospheric circulation in driving interannual variability in sea ice and near-surface air temperatures, particularly in the summer. Finally, we will discuss the potential role of ocean surface waves in driving variability in Arctic sea ice, based on observational analysis and new coupled modelling results.

How to cite: Roach, L., Blanchard-Wrigglesworth, E., and Bitz, C.: The roles of winds and waves in Arctic sea ice variability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10260, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10260, 2021.

EGU21-12282 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Prognostic criteria for Polar Lows
not presented

Natalia Vazaeva, Otto Chkhetiani, and Michael Kurgansky

Polar lows (PLs) are important mesoscale (horizontal diameter up to 1000 km) maritime weather systems at high latitudes, forming pole ward from the polar front. We consider the possible prognostic criteria of PLs, in particular, the kinematic helicity as a quadratic characteristic related to the integral vortex formations and the kinematic vorticity number (KVN). To calculate such characteristics we use reanalysis data and the results of numerical simulation with the WRF-ARW model (Version 4.1.) for the PLs over the Nordic (Norwegian and Barents) seas. For comparison, experimental data are used.

Our estimate of helicity is based on the connection of an integral helicity (IH) in the Ekman layer with the geostrophic wind velocity, due to the good correlation between IH and half the sum of the wind velocity squared. We have chosen IH averaged over preselected area covering the locality of PLs genesis. This area was moving along with the centre of PL during the numerical simulation.

The genesis of PLs can be divided into three stages: (i) an initial development stage, in which a number of small vortices appear in a shear zone; (ii) a late development stage, characterized by the merger of vortices; (iii) a mature stage, in which only a single PL is present. Approximately one day before PL formation, a significant increase in helicity was observed. The average helicity bulk density of large-scale motions has values of 0.3 – 0.4 ms-2. The local changes in helicity are adjacent to the front side of the PLs. The IH criterion described facilitates the identification of the PLs genesis area. For a more detailed analysis of the PL genesis, it is recommended to apply KVN, which is the additional indicator of PL size and intensity. At the moment of maximum intensity of PLs KVN can reach values of 12 – 14 units. The advantage of using KVN is also in its clear change directly in the centre of the emerging PLs, which allows to precisely indicates the limits of the most intense part of PLs.

The main challenge is to make the operational forecast of PLs possible through the selection of the prognostic integral characteristics of PLs, sufficient for PLs identification and for analysis of their size and intensity in a convenient, usable and understandable way. The criteria associated with vorticity and helicity are reflected in the PLs genesis and development quite clearly. At this time, such a claim is only a hypothesis, which must be tested using a larger set of cases. Future work will need to extend these analyses to other active PL basins. Also, it would be interesting to compare the representation of PLs by using any other criteria. It is intended to use our combined criteria as a precursor to machine learning-based PLs identification procedure where satellite image analysis and capture of particular cloud patterns are currently applied in most of the cases. It would eliminate the time consuming first stage of collecting data sets.

This work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (project No. 19-17-00248).

How to cite: Vazaeva, N., Chkhetiani, O., and Kurgansky, M.: Prognostic criteria for Polar Lows, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12282, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12282, 2021.

EGU21-13204 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

The role of subpolar North Atlantic as a source of predictability

Shuting Yang, Tian Tian, Yiguo Wang, Torben Schmith, Steffen M. Olsen, and Noel Keenlyside

The subpolar North Atlantic (SPNA) is a region experiencing substantial decadal variability, which has been linked to extreme weather impacts over continents. Recent studies have suggested that the connectivity with the SPNA may be a key to predictions in high latitudes. To understand the impact of the SPNA on predictability of North Atlantic-European sectors and the Arctic, we use two climate prediction systems, EC-Earth3-CPSAI and NorCPM1, to perform ensemble pacemaker experiments with a focus on the subpolar extreme cold anomaly event in 2015. This 2015 cold anomaly event is generally underestimated by the decadal prediction systems. In order to force the model to better represent the observed anomaly in SPNA, we apply nudging in a region of the SPNA (i.e., 51.5°W - 13.0°W, 30.4°N - 57.5°N, and from surface to 1000 m depth in the ocean). Here ocean temperature and salinity is restored to observed conditions from reanalysis in both model systems. All other aspects of the setup of this pacemaker experiment follow the protocol for the CMIP6 DCPP-A hindcasts and initialized on November 1, 2014. The restoration is applied during the hindcasts from November 2014 to December 2019. Multi-member ensembles of 10-year hindcasts are performed with 10 members for the EC-Earth3-CPSAI and 30 members for the NorCPM1.

The time evolution of ensembles of the initialized nudging hindcasts (EXP1) is compared with the initialized DCPP-A hindcast ensembles (EXP2) and the uninitialized ensembles (EXP3). The prediction skills of the three sets of experiments are also assessed. It can be seen that restoring the ocean temperature and salinity in the SPNA region to the reanalysis improves the prediction in the region quickly after the simulation starts, as expected. On the interannual to decadal time scales, the areas with improved prediction skills extend to over almost the entire North Atlantic for both models. The improved skill over Nordic Seas is particularly significant, especially for EC-Earth3-CPSAI. For NorCPM, the regions with improved skills extend to the entire Arctic. Our results suggest the possible role of the SPNA as a source of skillful predictions on interannual to decadal time scale, especially for high latitudes. The ocean pathways are the critical source of skill whereas our results imply a limited role of coupled feedbacks through the atmosphere.  

How to cite: Yang, S., Tian, T., Wang, Y., Schmith, T., Olsen, S. M., and Keenlyside, N.: The role of subpolar North Atlantic as a source of predictability, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13204, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13204, 2021.

EGU21-13616 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Atmospheric rivers landfalling at the Antarctic Peninsula: the Year of Polar Prediction summer special observing period measurements for model and forecast improvement 

Irina Gorodetskaya, Penny Rowe, Heike Kalesse, Patric Seifert, Sang-Jong Park, Yonghan Choi, and Raul Cordero

During the last several decades, the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) has shown a much stronger warming trend compared to the rest of the ice sheet and other land areas in the Southern Hemisphere (Jones et al, 2019). Recent studies have also highlighted that the AP has experienced both an increase in precipitation and in surface melt. Atmospheric rivers (ARs) – long corridors of intense moisture transport from subtropical and mid-latitude regions poleward - are known for prominent role in moisture transport (Gorodetskaya et al, 2020) and intense precipitation in Antarctica (Gorodetskaya et al 2014). At the same time, ARs have been also associated with major surface melt events at the AP and adjacent ice shelves (Wille et al 2019). In this study, we explore the double role of ARs, as carriers of both heat and moisture, in their impacts on precipitation (rain and snow), cloud radiative forcing and air temperature at the AP. Observations from the Year of Polar Prediction (YOPP, Bromwich et al 2020) endorsed sites/projects are used: Escudero station (the Characterization of the Antarctic Atmosphere and Low Clouds, or CAALC project) and King Sejong station (South Korean Antarctic Program projects) on King George Island, as well as Punta Arenas (southern Chile; the Dynamics, Aerosol, Cloud, And Precipitation Observations in the Pristine Environment of the Southern Ocean, or DACAPO-PESO project). These projects employed a set of ground-based remote sensing instrumentation for water vapor, cloud and precipitation observations, as well as frequent radiosonde launches during the YOPP Special Observing Period in austral summer 2018/2019. We present case studies characterizing the temporal evolution of ARs, focusing on thermodynamic and dynamic conditions accompanying the transition between snowfall and rain. Further, we demonstrate the added value of assimilating more frequent radiosonde observations in improving the forecast of weather conditions during ARs using the Polar-WRF model, including wind and precipitation prediction, which have important consequences for air, ship and station operations in Antarctica.

Bromwich, D. H., K. Werner, B. Casati, J. G. Powers, I. V. Gorodetskaya, F. Massonnet, V. Vitale, et al: The Year of Polar Prediction in the Southern Hemisphere (YOPP-SH), Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., doi: https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0255.1.

Gorodetskaya, I.V., Silva, T., Schmithüsen, H., and Hirasawa, N., 2020: Atmospheric River Signatures in Radiosonde Profiles and Reanalyses at the Dronning Maud Land Coast, East Antarctica.Adv. Atmos. Sci., https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-020-9221-8

Gorodetskaya, I. V., M. Tsukernik, K. Claes, M. F. Ralph, W. D. Neff, and N. P. M. van Lipzig, 2014: The role of atmospheric rivers in anomalous snow accumulation in East Antarctica. Geophys. Res. Lett.,  https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL060881

Jones, M. E., Bromwich, D. H., Nicolas, J. P., Carrasco, J., Plavcova, E., Zou, X., & Wang, A. S.-H. (2019). Sixty Years of Widespread Warming in the Southern Middle and High Latitudes (1957-2016). J. Climate, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-18

Wille, J.D., Favier, V., Dufour, A., Gorodetskaya, I.V., Turner, J., Agosta, C., and Codron, F., 2019. West Antarctic surface melt triggered by atmospheric rivers. Nat. Geosci. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-019-0460-1

How to cite: Gorodetskaya, I., Rowe, P., Kalesse, H., Seifert, P., Park, S.-J., Choi, Y., and Cordero, R.: Atmospheric rivers landfalling at the Antarctic Peninsula: the Year of Polar Prediction summer special observing period measurements for model and forecast improvement , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13616, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13616, 2021.

EGU21-15092 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Propagation of Thermohaline Anomalies and their predictive potential in the Northern North Atlantic

Helene R. Langehaug, Pablo Ortega, Francois Counillon, Daniela Matei, Elizabeth Maroon, Noel Keenlyside, Juliette Mignot, Yiguo Wang, Didier Swingedouw, Ingo Bethke, Shuting Yang, Gokhan Danabasoglu, Alessio Bellucci, Paolo Ruggieri, and Dario Nicolì

In this study we assess to what extent seven different dynamical prediction systems can retrospectively predict the winter sea surface temperature (SST) in the subpolar North Atlantic and the Nordic Seas in the time period 1970-2005. We focus in particular on the region where warm water flows poleward, i.e., the Atlantic water pathway, and on interannual-to-decadal time scales. To better understand why dynamical prediction systems have predictive skill or lack thereof, we confront them with a mechanism identified from observations – propagation of oceanic anomalies from low to high latitudes – on different forecast lead times. This observed mechanism shows that warm and cold anomalies propagate along the Atlantic water pathway within a certain time frame. A key result from this study is that most models have difficulty representing this mechanism, resulting in an overall poor prediction skill after 1-2 years lead times (after applying a band-pass filter to focus on interannual-to-decadal time scales). There is a link, although not very strong, between predictive skill and the representation of the SST propagation. Observational studies demonstrate predictability several years in advance in this region, thus suggesting a great potential for improvement of dynamical climate predictions by resolving the causes for the misrepresentation of the oceanic link. Inter model differences in simulating surface velocities along the Atlantic water pathway suggest that realistic velocities are important to better circulate anomalies poleward, and hence, increase predictive skill on interannual-to-decadal time scales in the oceanic gateway to the Arctic.

How to cite: Langehaug, H. R., Ortega, P., Counillon, F., Matei, D., Maroon, E., Keenlyside, N., Mignot, J., Wang, Y., Swingedouw, D., Bethke, I., Yang, S., Danabasoglu, G., Bellucci, A., Ruggieri, P., and Nicolì, D.: Propagation of Thermohaline Anomalies and their predictive potential in the Northern North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15092, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15092, 2021.

EGU21-13126 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Probability Assessments of an Ice-Free Arctic: Comparing Statistical and Climate Model Projections

Glenn Rudebusch and Francis Diebold

Based on several decades of satellite data, we provide statistical forecasts of Arctic sea ice extent during the rest of this century. The best fitting statistical model indicates that overall sea ice coverage is declining at an increasing rate. By contrast, average projections from the CMIP5 global climate models foresee a gradual slowing of Arctic sea ice loss even in scenarios with high amounts of carbon emissions. Our long-range statistical projections also deliver probability assessments of the timing of an ice-free Arctic. These results indicate almost a 60 percent chance of an effectively ice-free Arctic Ocean sometime during the 2030s—much earlier than the average projection from the global climate models. Our results are also consistent with projections from bivariate regressions of sea ice extent and carbon emissions. 

How to cite: Rudebusch, G. and Diebold, F.: Probability Assessments of an Ice-Free Arctic: Comparing Statistical and Climate Model Projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13126, 2021.

EGU21-15595 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

The North Atlantic Ocean as a Modulator of Vegetation Greening/Browning in the Northern High Latitudes?

Leonard F. Borchert and Alexander J. Winkler

Vegetation in the northern high latitudes shows a characteristic pattern of persistent changes as documented by multi-decadal satellite observations. The prevailing explanation that these mainly increasing trends (greening) are a consequence of external CO2 forcing, i.e., due to the ubiquitous effect of CO2-induced fertilization and/or warming of temperature-limited ecosystems, however does not explain why some areas also show decreasing trends of vegetation cover (browning). We propose here to consider the dominant mode of multi-decadal internal climate variability in the north Atlantic region, the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV), as the missing link in the explanation of greening and browning trend patterns in the northern high latitudes. Such a link would also imply potential for decadal predictions of ecosystem changes in the northern high latitudes.

An analysis of observational and reanalysis data sets for the period 1979-2019 shows that locations characterized by greening trends largely coincide with warming summer temperature and increasing precipitation. Wherever either cooling or decreasing precipitation occurs, browning trends are observed over this period. These precipitation and temperature patterns are significantly correlated with a North Atlantic sea surface temperature index that represents the AMV signal, indicating its role in modulating greening/browning trend patterns in the northern high latitudes.

Using two large ensembles of coupled Earth system model simulations (100 members of MPI-ESM-LR Grand Ensemble and 32 members of the IPSL-CM6A-LR Large Ensemble), we separate the greening/browning pattern caused by external CO2 forcing from that caused by internal climate variability associated with the AMV. These sets of model simulations enable a clean separation of the externally forced signal from internal variability. While the greening and browning patterns in the simulations do not agree with observations in terms of magnitude and location, we find consistent internally generated greening/browning patterns in both models caused by changes in temperature and precipitation linked to the AMV signal. These greening/browning trend patterns are of the same magnitude as those caused by the external forcing alone. Our work therefore shows that internally-generated changes of vegetation in the northern lands, driven by AMV, are potentially as large as those caused by external CO2 forcing. We thus argue that the observed pattern of greening/browning in the northern high latitudes could originate from the combined effect of rising CO2 as well as the AMV.

How to cite: Borchert, L. F. and Winkler, A. J.: The North Atlantic Ocean as a Modulator of Vegetation Greening/Browning in the Northern High Latitudes?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15595, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15595, 2021.

EGU21-16310 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

The relative roles of Arctic and Antarctic sea-ice loss in the response to greenhouse warming

Stephanie Hay and Paul Kusnher

Antarctic sea ice has gradually increased in extent over the forty-year-long satellite record, in contrast with the clear decrease in sea-ice extent seen in the Arctic over the same time period. However, state-of-the-art climate models ubiquitously project Antarctic sea-ice to decrease over the coming century, much as they do for Arctic sea-ice. Several recent years have also seen record low Antarctic sea-ice. It is therefore of interest to understand what the climate response to Antarctic sea-ice loss will be. 

We have carried out new fully coupled climate model simulations to assess the response to sea-ice loss in either hemisphere separately or coincidentally under different albedo parameter settings to determine the relative importance of each. By perturbing the albedo of the snow overlying the sea ice and the albedo of the bare sea ice, we obtain a suite of simulations to assess the linearity and additivity of sea-ice loss. We find the response to sea-ice loss in each hemisphere exhibits a high degree of additivity, and can simply be decomposed into responses due to loss in each hemisphere separately. We find that the response to Antarctic sea-ice loss exceeds that of Arctic sea-ice loss in the tropics, and that Antarctic sea-ice loss leads to statistically significant Arctic warming, while the opposite is not true.

With these new simulations and one in which CO2 is instantaneously doubled , we can further characterize the response to sea-ice loss from each hemisphere using an extension to classical pattern scaling that includes three controlling parameters. This allows us to simultaneously compute the sensitivity patterns to Arctic sea-ice loss, Antarctic sea-ice loss, and to tropical warming. The statistically significant response to Antarctic sea-ice loss in the Northern Hemisphere extratropics is found to be mediated by tropical warming and small amounts of Arctic sea-ice loss.

How to cite: Hay, S. and Kusnher, P.: The relative roles of Arctic and Antarctic sea-ice loss in the response to greenhouse warming, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16310, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16310, 2021.

EGU21-16393 | vPICO presentations | CL4.31

Connecting Antarctic Sea Ice and Mid-latitude Precipitation

Tristan Rendfrey and Ashley Payne
Climatic changes induce many significant changes to long standing weather patterns. These mechanisms interact to drive consequences that may not be immediately obvious. One such connection involves the apparent relationship between polar sea ice extent and mid-latitude precipitation timing and location. This correlation, its mechanisms, and possible influences on weather are decently understood with respect to the Northern Hemisphere. However, the analogous relation for the Southern Hemisphere has been less studied. This provides an opportunity to examine connections between polar conditions and mid-latitude weather.
 
We explore the teleconnection between sea ice extent and lower latitude precipitation over the Southern Hemisphere. We investigate this relationship through observations of sea ice coverage using ICESat and ICESat-2 compared with reanalysis data via MERRA-2 in order to understand the variability of sea ice extent and its impact on midlatitude precipitation over the Southern Hemisphere. This study particularly examines the importance of seasonality and regional variations of the relationship.

How to cite: Rendfrey, T. and Payne, A.: Connecting Antarctic Sea Ice and Mid-latitude Precipitation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16393, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16393, 2021.

CL4.34 – Using Earth system science to understand climate change and its impacts: Results of the Franco-German “Make Our Planet Great Again” research initiative and beyond

The current and future anthropogenic-induced high-latitude warming will have global climatic implications due to polar ice mass loss, sea level rise and ocean circulation changes. However, uncertainty remains on future climate projections mainly due to an incomplete understanding of climate, cryosphere and carbon cycle feedback processes occurring at centennial to millennial- timescales. Progress can be achieved by exploring climate and environmental changes that occurred in the past. In the HOTCLIM project, we are studying past warm periods, also referred to as interglacials, which exhibit a polar warming comparable to that projected by 2100 due to specific combinations of orbital and CO2 forcing. Especially, we are investigating the link between the carbon cycle dynamics and climate changes. To do so, we are combining (i) new analyses on the air trapped in Antarctic deep ice cores to inform on past changes in Antarctic climate and atmospheric CO2 concentrations (ii) climate and environmental data synthesis looking into the lower latitudes using terrestrial and oceanic archives (sea surface temperature, hydrological cycles, ocean circulation) (iii) an evaluation of outputs from climate models using the new comparison of the paleoclimatic datasynthesis and models output. The HOTCLIM project will improve our understanding of the natural climate variability and the processes involved during past periods associated with temperature changes comparable to projected future warming, hence helping improve climate projections

Here, we present the first results from the HOTCLIM project which is a multi-archive synthesis focused on the warm interval occurring between 190 and 243 ka BP, also refered to as Marine Isotopic Stage 7 (MIS 7). This warm period is of special interest because it follows the fastest transition between a cold (glacial) and a hot (interglacial) period of the last 800 000 ka, with a polar warming of 10 degrees in less than 5ka. We have compiled more than 30 oceanic cores, 9 speleothems and 3 ice cores covering the MIS 7 period. To compare them, we are now building a common chronology to these records. The use of combined continental (ice cores, speleothems) and oceanic (sediment cores) archives located on the whole surface of the Earth will allows to characterize (i) the amplitude and the temporal structure of the surface warming across the globe (ii) the contrast between oceanic and continental warming.

How to cite: Legrain, E., Capron, E., and Parrenin, F.: Toward an improved characterisation of climate and environmental changes during warm periods of the past: First results from the MOPGA HOTCLIM project , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12932, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12932, 2021.

EGU21-7546 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

History Matching for parameter tuning: the Lorenz96 model as a case study

Redouane Lguensat, Julie Deshayes, and Venkatramani Balaji

A major cause of earth system model discrepancies result from processes that are missed or are incorrectly represented in the model's equations. Despite the increasing number of collected observations, reducing parametric uncertainties is still an enourmous challenge.

The process of relying on experience and intuition to find good sets of parameters, commonly referred to as "parameter tuning" keeps having a central role in the roadmaps followed by dozens of modeling groups involved in community efforts such as the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP). 

In this work, we study a tool from the Uncertainty Quantification community that started recently to draw attention in climate modeling: History Matching also referred to as "Iterative Refocussing".

The core idea of History Matching is to run several simulations with different set of parameters and then use observed data to rule-out any parameter settings which are "implausible". Since climate simulation models are computationally heavy and do not allow testing every possible parameter setting, we employ an emulator that can be a cheap and accurate replacement. Here a machine learning algorithm, namely, Gaussian Process Regression is used for the emulating step. History Matching is then a good example where the recent advances in machine learning can be of high interest to climate modeling.

We investigate History Matching on a toy model: the two-layer Lorenz96, and share our findings about the challenges and opportunities of using this technique. We also discuss the use of this technique for realistic ocean models such as NEMO.

How to cite: Lguensat, R., Deshayes, J., and Balaji, V.: History Matching for parameter tuning: the Lorenz96 model as a case study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7546, 2021.

EGU21-819 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

Carbon cycle response to temperature overshoot beyond 2 °C – an analysis of CMIP6 models

Irina Melnikova, Olivier Boucher, Patricia Cadule, Philippe Ciais, Thomas Gasser, Yann Quilcaille, Hideo Shiogama, Kaoru Tachiiri, Tokuta Yokohata, and Katsumasa Tanaka

There is a substantial gap between the current emissions of greenhouse gases and levels required for achieving the 2 and 1.5 °C temperature targets of the Paris Agreement. Understanding the implications of a temperature overshoot is thus an increasingly relevant research topic. We carry out a study as part of the “Achieving the Paris Agreement Temperature Targets after Overshoot (PRATO)” project of the MOPGA programme on the 2 °C overshoot of the Paris Agreement temperature target. We explore the carbon cycle feedbacks over land and ocean in the SSP5-3.4-OS overshoot scenario by using an ensemble of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6 Earth system models. Models show that after the CO2 concentration and air temperature peaks, land and ocean are decreasing carbon sinks from the 2040s and become sources for a limited time in the 22nd century. The decrease in the carbon uptake precedes the CO2 concentration peak. The early peak of the ocean uptake stems from its dependency on the atmospheric CO2 growth rate. The early peak of the land uptake occurs due to a larger increase in ecosystem respiration than the increase in gross primary production, as well as due to a concomitant increase in land-use change emissions primarily attributed to the wide implementation of biofuel croplands. The carbon cycle feedback parameters amplify after the CO2 concentration and temperature peaks, so that land and ocean absorb more carbon per unit change in the atmospheric CO2 change (stronger negative feedback) and lose more carbon per unit temperature change (stronger positive feedback) compared to if the feedbacks stayed unchanged. The increased negative CO2 feedback outperforms the increased positive climate feedback. This feature should be investigated under other scenarios and reflected in simple climate models.

How to cite: Melnikova, I., Boucher, O., Cadule, P., Ciais, P., Gasser, T., Quilcaille, Y., Shiogama, H., Tachiiri, K., Yokohata, T., and Tanaka, K.: Carbon cycle response to temperature overshoot beyond 2 °C – an analysis of CMIP6 models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-819, 2021.

EGU21-4435 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

Retooling climate science for risk assessment

Ben Sanderson, Saloua Peatier, and Laurent Terray

Over recent years, climate change has become a global issue, leading political agendas and projecting onto almost every economic and development decision made today.  However, the way that we conduct climate science has remained broadly unchanged since the publication of the first IPCC report in 1990 - still relying on an ensemble of opportunity of climate models which doesn't allow for an estimation of high-impact tail risks and a highly idealized scenario framework which fails to test the fundamental technological assumptions which underpin our remaining pathways for achieving the Paris Agreement.  Here, we discuss how our strategy within the Make Our Planet Great Again "RISCCi" project is attempting to reframe the simulation of climate projections such as to provide better guidance for robust decision-making by categorizing the deep uncertainties of climate projections and mitigation pathways.  We present the initial results from an CNRM ensemble project which seeks to explore tail behaviour in climate feedbacks and impacts, and outline in a wider sense how future work and climate assessment needs to respond to the growing and evolving needs of a society as it works to minimise, and adapt to, climate change.

How to cite: Sanderson, B., Peatier, S., and Terray, L.: Retooling climate science for risk assessment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4435, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4435, 2021.

EGU21-16433 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

Mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions from global croplands under a changing climate and increasing food demand

Andrew Smerald, David Kraus, Kathrin Fuchs, Edwin Haas, Klaus Butterbach-Bahl, and Clemens Scheer
Agricultural nitrogen (N) inputs have grown massively over the last century, driving increases in crop yields, but also resulting in increased greenhouse-gas emissions and nutrient overloading of ecosystems. Of particular note is the increase in emissions of N2O, a greenhouse gas with 300 times the warming potential of CO2.  While the total global yearly N2O emissions can be easily deduced from atmospheric measurements, much less is known about the contribution of different cropping systems, and how increasing food demand will affect these emissions in the future. This knowledge is important for developing well-targeted mitigation strategies that reduce N2O emissions while increasing crop production. In order to help resolve this issue, we have simulated global croplands, one of the main beneficiaries of increased N inputs, using a process-based model that captures both crop growth and nitrogen and carbon cycling through the soil. This allows us to quantify total N2O emissions by crop type, identify hotspots and explore how a changing climate and increasing food demand are likely to impact future emissions. The idea is that this will aid in the search for agricultural management strategies that ensure food security while reducing the climate impact.
 

How to cite: Smerald, A., Kraus, D., Fuchs, K., Haas, E., Butterbach-Bahl, K., and Scheer, C.: Mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions from global croplands under a changing climate and increasing food demand, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16433, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16433, 2021.

EGU21-13088 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Cost-effective implementation of the Paris Agreement using flexible greenhouse gas metrics

Katsumasa Tanaka, Olivier Boucher, Philippe Ciais, Daniel Johansson, and Johannes Morfeldt

Greenhouse gas (GHG) metrics, that is, conversion factors to evaluate the emissions of non-CO2 climate forcers on a common scale with CO2, serve crucial functions upon the implementation of the Paris Agreement. While different metrics have been proposed, their economic cost-effectiveness has not been investigated under a range of pathways, including those temporarily missing or significantly overshooting the temperature targets of the Paris Agreement. Here we show that cost-effective metrics for methane that minimize the overall cost of climate mitigation are time-dependent, primarily determined by the pathway, and strongly influenced by temperature overshoot. The Paris Agreement will implement the conventional 100-year Global Warming Potential (GWP100), a good approximation of cost-effective metrics for the coming decades. In the longer term, however, we suggest that parties consider adapting the choice of common metrics to the future pathway as it unfolds, as part of the global stocktake, if cost-effectiveness is a key consideration.

How to cite: Tanaka, K., Boucher, O., Ciais, P., Johansson, D., and Morfeldt, J.: Cost-effective implementation of the Paris Agreement using flexible greenhouse gas metrics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13088, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13088, 2021.

EGU21-10246 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Drought and food security in Senegal from the perspective of household access

Alessandra Giannini and Elisabeth Ilboudo-Nébié

In the Sahel food security has been a top development priority since the abrupt onset of persistent drought caught the region by surprise in the early 1970s, causing repeated recurrences of extreme food insecurity. Research ultimately demonstrated the global climate root of drought, going so far as to partially attributing persistence to anthropogenic emissions of aerosols and greenhouse gases. 

We exploit surveys collected in Senegal in the last 10 years to assess the year-to-year dynamics of household food security in relation to rainfall variability. We combine three variables from the household surveys, namely the Food Consumption Score, the Food Expenditure Share and the Reduced Coping Strategies Index, to explore the access dimension of food security. Cluster analysis on these three variables leads us to 1) classify households into categories of food security, and 2) discuss the response of each category of household to seasonality and year-to-year variability in climate. 

The UN World Food Programme and in-country partner institutions normally survey thousands of households every few years, in order to assess "baseline" (as opposed to "crisis") food security conditions. However, the years that Senegal households were surveyed in this most recent decade include 2014, a year of severe, national-scale drought. Comparison with the other, non-drought years allows to directly assess the shock from the perspective of the households themselves, and to describe coping mechanisms based on "baseline" food security category. We find that in the drought year (1) more of the “average rural” households that normally do not recur to coping strategies actually did, and (2) food expenditure share increases in all but one food security category.

How to cite: Giannini, A. and Ilboudo-Nébié, E.: Drought and food security in Senegal from the perspective of household access, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10246, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10246, 2021.

EGU21-4975 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

MOPGA/Make Air Quality Great Again: AfriqAir and solution-oriented approaches to improving air quality in the Global South

Michael R Giordano, Julien Bahino, Matthias Beekmann, and Ramachandran Subramanian and the AfriqAir/MAQGA Team

Air pollution is responsible for seven million premature deaths each year, linked to numerous cardiovascular and other diseases. Both monitoring pollution levels and identifying sources is necessary to reduce overall exposure. Many parts of Africa suffer from extreme pollution levels, but the cost of traditional air quality monitoring leads to a significant data gap, which also hinders the development of local capacity to do these tasks. In order to overcome these obstacles, the “Make Air Quality Great Again” (MAQGA) project was funded by the French Agence nationale de la recherché (ANR) under the MOPGA program. The MAQGA project in turn set up the AfriqAir consortium, a global organization that brings together air quality scientists and researchers interested in using air quality data to tackle air quality problems in Africa. Now entering its third year of existence, the consortium has made real strides in increasing the number of air quality monitors in Africa as well as building capacity with local researchers and partners across the continent. This presentation will provide a recap of what the consortium has achieved with ANR and MOPGA support, how we have persevered through the COVID-19 pandemic, and our plans for the immediate and long-term futures. This presentation will cover the scientific gains made by connecting African air quality researchers as well as the successes aided by the network building that AfriqAir has facilitated. 

How to cite: Giordano, M. R., Bahino, J., Beekmann, M., and Subramanian, R. and the AfriqAir/MAQGA Team: MOPGA/Make Air Quality Great Again: AfriqAir and solution-oriented approaches to improving air quality in the Global South, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4975, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4975, 2021.

EGU21-12159 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

The anthropogenic environmental impacts and changes in the tropical Atlantic - a high resolution Cuban coral time series over 154 years

Marie Harbott, Henry Wu, Henning Kuhnert, Simone Kasemann, Anette Meixner, Carlos Jimenez, Patricia González-Diáz, and Tim Rixen

Changes in the surface ocean pH and temperature caused by the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 are posing a threat to calcifying marine organisms. Recent studies have observed significant impacts on coral reef ecosystems with impaired carbonate skeletal growth and decreased calcification due to acidifying oceans. In situ measurements from buoys, ships, and remote observations by satellite of sea surface temperature, salinity, and ocean’s carbonate chemistry are sparse and only date back a few decades. The current coverage of observations for the northwestern Cuban coastal waters provides hence an incomplete picture of natural climate variability over interannual to interdecadal timescales, showing the need for high resolution climate archives.

Cuba is situated between densely populated landmasses of North and South America offering a unique environment to study multiple aspects of anthropogenic activity across the region as well as their interconnectivity.

A massive coral, Siderastrea siderea, from Cuba’s northwestern coast, was used as a natural archive to reconstruct bimonthly changes in SST, and carbonate chemistry through a multi-proxy approach since preindustrial times.

Preliminary results indicate a decrease in δ18O of 0.32 ‰ over 154 years since 1852,  indicating warming and/or freshening of the surface water over this period. Over the same time period, the δ11B ratio decreased by ca. 1.6 ‰, translating into a decrease of 0.1 on the pH scale, reflecting the acidification of the northwestern Cuban coastal waters. Furthermore, an accelerating decrease of coral δ13C from the 1850s to 2005 of 1.5 ‰ demonstrates the anthropogenic imprint due to increased fossil fuel combustion. Further investigation and the comparison to trace elements indicate possible baseline shifts in regional seawater carbonate chemistry that have been affected by anthropogenic activity.

How to cite: Harbott, M., Wu, H., Kuhnert, H., Kasemann, S., Meixner, A., Jimenez, C., González-Diáz, P., and Rixen, T.: The anthropogenic environmental impacts and changes in the tropical Atlantic - a high resolution Cuban coral time series over 154 years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12159, 2021.

EGU21-6321 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

Revealing mechanisms of change in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation under global heating

Maike Sonnewald, Redouane Lguensat, and Venkatramani Balaji

The North Atlantic ocean is key to climate through its role in heat transport and storage, but the response of the circulation’s drivers to a changing climate is poorly constrained. The transparent machine learning method Tracking global Heating with Ocean Regimes (THOR) identifies drivers of circulation with minimal input: depth, dynamic sea level and wind stress. Beyond a black box approach, THOR's predictive skill is transparent. A dataset is created with features engineered and labeled by an explicitly interpretable equation transform and k-means application. A multilayer perceptron is then trained, explaining its skill using relevance maps and theory. THOR reveals a weakened circulation with abrupt CO2 quadrupling, due to a shift in deep water formation areas and locations of the Gulf Stream and Trans Atlantic Current transporting heat northward. If CO2 is increased 1% yearly, similar but transient patterns emerge. THOR could accelerate model analysis and facilitate process oriented intercomparisons.

How to cite: Sonnewald, M., Lguensat, R., and Balaji, V.: Revealing mechanisms of change in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation under global heating, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6321, 2021.

EGU21-15573 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34 | Highlight

Dynamical and Thermodynamic Changes in the Historical Response of Atlantic Sector Rainfall to Anthropogenic Emissions in the IPSL-5A Model.

Claudine Wenhaji Ndomeni and Alessandra Giannini

CMIP5 models, including IPSL-5A, developed at the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, largely reproduce the observed post-World War II decline in Sahel precipitation. We use all- and single-forcing historical simulations performed with IPSL-5A to better understand the impact of emissions of aerosols and greenhouse gases in Sahel drought. Specifically, we analyze the moisture budget to assess the two main processes, namely stabilization and moisture supply, that are hypothesized to shape moisture convergence and precipitation in the Atlantic sector.

1) The net change has the sign of the expected thermodynamic change: an increase in precipitation in GHG-induced warming, and a decrease in aerosol-induced cooling. Thermodynamic change is opposed by dynamical change.

The rainfall change in GHG-induced warming, in the Sahel as well as across all other regions of climatological precipitation, including the Atlantic Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), is positive and largely dominated by the change in the thermodynamic term associated with convergence, meaning that the change is consistent with an increase in moisture that assumes no change in the atmospheric circulation: as the ocean warms, it supplies more moisture to the monsoon.

This wetting thermodynamic term associated with convergence is opposed by drying associated with the corresponding dynamical term, which is especially strong at the margins, and signifies a weakened mass flux, or slow-down of the overturning circulation. This negative change in mass convergence is symptomatic of stabilization in a warmer world.

The effect of sulfate aerosol-induced cooling is equal and opposite to that of GHG-induced warming.

2) The ITCZ response is complicated by the dynamical ocean feedback associated with changes in the meridional gradient in sea surface temperature. GHG-induced warming leads not only to an increase in precipitation, but also to a poleward shift of the ITCZ. This poleward shift is accompanied by (south) westerly wind anomalies, which drive an off-equatorial cooling Ekman flow equatorward of the ITCZ. These same westerly anomalies induce a weakening of equatorial upwelling, and warming of the eastern equatorial Atlantic cold tongue.

Here, too, the effect of sulfate aerosol-induced cooling is equal and opposite to that of GHG-induced warming. An equatorward shift of the ITCZ is accompanied by (north) easterly wind anomalies, which drive off-equatorial warming, and equatorial cooling.

How to cite: Wenhaji Ndomeni, C. and Giannini, A.: Dynamical and Thermodynamic Changes in the Historical Response of Atlantic Sector Rainfall to Anthropogenic Emissions in the IPSL-5A Model., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15573, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15573, 2021.

EGU21-9112 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

A regional view of the linkages between hydro-climatic changes and deforestation in the Southern Amazon

Sly Wongchuig, Jhan Carlo Espinoza, Thomas Condom, Hans Segura, Josyane Ronchail, Paola Arias, Clementine Junquas, Antoine Rabatel, and Thierry Lebel

Linking the Amazonian deforestation to changes in the hydrological cycle remains a puzzling question, addressed here through the use of recent global databases analyzing the relations between key hydro-climate variables (Precipitation (P), potential and actual evapotranspiration (PET and AET, respectively)), the surface water-energy balance and indices of forest cover change (regional forest loss ratio -RFL and regional non-forest vegetation ratio -RNF) for Southern Amazon (south of 8°S) and over the 1981-2018 period. The Southern Amazon constitutes a peculiar region due to specific climatic characteristics and shows a higher significant deforestation rate in comparison with the Northern Amazon. We further subdivided the study region into three subregions called Southern Bolivian Amazon (15° S‒21° S, 57° W‒70° W), Southern Peruvian Amazon (8° S‒15° S, 77° W‒65° W) and Southern Brazilian Amazon (8° S‒15° S, 65° W‒50° W). The surface water-energy balance is analyzed using a pixel-based Budyko-like theoretical framework approach, which discriminates energy-limited regions from water-limited regions. Southern Bolivian Amazon is shown to have undergone the strongest forest transition, becoming water-limited in conjunction with high forest loss. In this region, there is a significant relation between RFL values above 40%, P decrease, PET increases and AET decrease. These results suggest that areas with RNF values higher than 40% are prone to shift from an energy-limited to a water-limited state and remain trapped in this new state. Regions further north remain energy-limited due to minor P changes and even though significant increases in PET and decreases in AET are observed, associated with deforestation (high values RFL). This is typically the case in the ‘Arc of Deforestation’. In the Southern Bolivian Amazon, land use transition is associated with much larger changes from closed forest to a low-tree cover state as compared to regions further north - by at least a factor three as a proportion of area. Our findings indicate a clear link between hydro-climatic changes and deforestation, providing a new perspective on their spatial variability on a regional scale.

 

This research is part of the French AMANECER-MOPGA project.

How to cite: Wongchuig, S., Espinoza, J. C., Condom, T., Segura, H., Ronchail, J., Arias, P., Junquas, C., Rabatel, A., and Lebel, T.: A regional view of the linkages between hydro-climatic changes and deforestation in the Southern Amazon, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9112, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9112, 2021.

EGU21-13546 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Developing a triple tree-ring constraint for tree growth and physiology in a global land surface model

Jonathan Barichivich, Philippe Peylin, Valérie Daux, Camille Risi, Jina Jeong, Sebastiaan Luyssaert, and Thomas Launois

Gradual anthropogenic warming and parallel changes in the major global biogeochemical cycles are slowly pushing forest ecosystems into novel growing conditions, with uncertain consequences for ecosystem dynamics and climate. Short-term forest responses (i.e., years to a decade) to global change factors are relatively well understood and skilfully simulated by land surface models (LSMs). However, confidence on model projections weaken towards longer time scales and to the future, mainly because the long-term responses (i.e., decade to century) of these models remain unconstrained. This issue limits confidence on climate model projections. Annually-resolved tree-ring records, extending back to pre-industrial conditions, have the potential to constrain model responses at interannual to centennial time scales. Here, we constrain the representation of tree growth and physiology in the ORCHIDEE global land surface model using the simulated interannual variability of tree-ring width and carbon (Δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) stable isotopes in six sites in boreal and temperate Europe.  The model simulates Δ13C (r = 0.31-0.80) and δ18O (r = 0.36-0.74) variability better than tree-ring width variability (r < 0.55), with an overall skill similar to that of other state-of-the-art models such as MAIDENiso and LPX-Bern. These results show that growth variability is not well represented, and that the parameterization of leaf-level physiological responses to drought stress in the temperate region can be improved with tree-ring data. The representation of carbon storage and remobilization dynamics is critical to improve the realism of simulated growth variability, temporal carrying over and recovery of forest ecosystems after climate extremes. The simulated physiological response to rising CO2 over the 20th century is consistent with tree-ring data in the temperate region, despite an overestimation of seasonal drought stress and stomatal control on photosynthesis. Photosynthesis correlates directly with isotopic variability, but correlations with δ18O combine physiological effects and climate variability impacts on source water signatures. The integration of tree-ring data (i.e. the triple constraint: width, Δ13C and δ18O) and land surface models as demonstrated here should contribute towards reducing current uncertainties in forest carbon and water cycling.

How to cite: Barichivich, J., Peylin, P., Daux, V., Risi, C., Jeong, J., Luyssaert, S., and Launois, T.: Developing a triple tree-ring constraint for tree growth and physiology in a global land surface model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13546, 2021.

EGU21-9795 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Site-level simulations of measurable soil fractions with the Millennial V2 soil model

Rose Abramoff, Bertrand Guenet, Haicheng Zhang, Katerina Georgiou, Xiaofeng Xu, Raphael Viscarra-Rossel, Wenping Yuan, and Philippe Ciais

Soil carbon (C) models are used to predict C sequestration responses to climate and land use change. Yet, the soil models embedded in Earth system models typically do not represent processes that reflect our current understanding of soil C cycling, such as microbial decomposition, mineral association, and aggregation. Rather, they rely on conceptual pools with turnover times that are fit to bulk C stocks and/or fluxes. As measurements of soil fractions become increasingly available, it is necessary for soil C models to represent these measurable quantities so that model processes can be evaluated more accurately. Here we present Version 2 (V2) of the Millennial model, a soil model developed in 2018 to simulate C pools that can be measured by extraction or fractionation, including particulate organic C, mineral-associated organic C, aggregate C, microbial biomass, and dissolved organic C. Model processes have been updated to reflect the current understanding of mineral-association, temperature sensitivity and reaction kinetics, and different model structures were tested within an open-source framework. We evaluated the ability of Millennial V2 to simulate total soil organic C (SOC), as well as the mineral-associated and particulate fractions, using three independent data sets of soil fractionation measurements spanning a range of climate and geochemistry in Australia (N=495), Europe (N=176), and across the globe (N=716). Considering RMSE and AIC as indices of model performance, site-level evaluations show that Millennial V2 predicts soil organic carbon content better than the widely-used Century model, despite an increase in process complexity and number of parameters. Millennial V2 also reproduces between-site variation in SOC across gradients of climate, plant productivity, and soil type. By including the additional constraints of measured soil fractions, we can predict site-level mean residence times similar to a global distribution of mean residence times measured using SOC/respiration rate under an assumption of steady state. The Millennial V2 model updates the conceptual Century model pools and processes and represents our current understanding of the roles that microbial activity, mineral association and aggregation play in soil C sequestration.

How to cite: Abramoff, R., Guenet, B., Zhang, H., Georgiou, K., Xu, X., Viscarra-Rossel, R., Yuan, W., and Ciais, P.: Site-level simulations of measurable soil fractions with the Millennial V2 soil model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9795, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9795, 2021.

Cooperation between countries in managing and protecting shared marine resources is beneficial both ecologically and economically, but how best to establish the cooperation needed at a global scale is under constant evolution. Here, we used hydrodynamic modelling to identify ecologically connected networks of marine reserves and evaluated these networks with socio-economic indicators. We found that 17% (11/66) of the largest networks (>20 reserves) span multiple countries and are part of a heterogeneous networks. The countries involved in the heterogeneous networks have different economic, political, and cultural views. Most of the networks currently are homogenous and have similar levels of development, shared languages, and other cultural values. While economic and cultural homogeneity might lead to more efficient ecological management in the short term, heterogeneous networks may prove to be more resilient in the longer term, once climate change has impacted marine connectivity. 

How to cite: McDowell, J.: Low economic, political, and cultural diversity within the largest global networks of marine reserves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8540, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8540, 2021.

EGU21-2447 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

An ensemble-based eddy and spectral analysis, with application to the Gulf Stream

William K. Dewar, Quentin Jamet, Takaya Uchida, and Andrew Poje

The `eddying' ocean, recognized for several decades, has been the focus of much observational and theoretical research.  We here describe a generalization for the analysis of eddy energy, based in the use of ensembles, that  addresses two key related issues: the definition of an `eddy' and the general computation of energy spectra. An ensemble identifies eddies as the unpredictable component of the flow, and permits the scale decomposition of their energy in inhomogeneous and non-stationary settings. It also avoids the `tapering' or `windowing' of the data required by traditional approaches. We apply the analysis to a mesoscale resolving  (1/12 degree) ensemble of the separated North Atlantic Gulf Stream. Our results show that the eddies are consistent with the theoretical predictions of quasi-geostrophy both at the surface and ocean interior. 

How to cite: Dewar, W. K., Jamet, Q., Uchida, T., and Poje, A.: An ensemble-based eddy and spectral analysis, with application to the Gulf Stream, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2447, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2447, 2021.

EGU21-70 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Towards a potential vorticity based mesoscale closure scheme

Takaya Uchida, Quentin Jamet, William Dewar, Dhruv Balwada, Julien Le Sommer, and Thierry Penduff

With the advent of high-performance computing, we are now capable of simulating the ocean and climate system on decadal to centennial timescales. However, global and basin-scale simulations still lack the spatial resolution necessary to resolve the mesoscales (hereon referred to as mesoscale-permitting simulations), a scale roughly on the order of O(100 km). Here, we provide a first step towards a potential vorticity (PV) based mesoscale closure scheme in order to improve the representation of mesoscale eddies in such simulations by taking advantage of the thickness-weighted averaged (TWA) framework. In the TWA framework the total eddy feedback can be encapsulated in the Eliassen-Palm (E-P) flux divergence. This implies that mesoscale closure schemes aimed at representing the total eddy feedback should therefore be representing the E-P flux divergence. The TWA framework further elucidates that its divergence is equivalent to the eddy Ertel PV flux. In other words, if one is to parametrize the eddy Ertel PV flux, one has parametrized the total eddy feedback onto the mean flow. Using a 1/12° North Atlantic ensemble simulation with 24 members, which allows us to decompose the mesoscale variability from the forced dynamics, we show that the eddy Ertel PV flux can be related to the local-gradient of mean Ertel PV as an active tracer via an anisotropic eddy diffusivity tensor. What follows is that not only does the tensor bring together the isopycnal thickness skew diffusivity and isopycnic tracer diffusivity, the former known as the Gent-McWilliams (GM) parametrization and latter the Redi parametrization, but also incorporates the eddy momentum fluxes. Although the Redi parametrization has existed longer than GM, there has been much more development in the latter, leaving the Redi diffusivity poorly constrained. Being able to treat GM and Redi simultaneously is another strength of our framework.

How to cite: Uchida, T., Jamet, Q., Dewar, W., Balwada, D., Le Sommer, J., and Penduff, T.: Towards a potential vorticity based mesoscale closure scheme, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-70, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-70, 2021.

EGU21-13127 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Analyzing the Kinetic Energy budget of submesoscale-permitting ensemble simulations

Quentin Jamet, William K. Dewar, Thierry Penduff, Julien Le Sommer, Stephanie Leroux, Jean-Marc Molines, and Jonathan Gula

Ensemble simulations are becoming more and more popular in oceanography. Among other advantages, this modeling strategy elevates the number of dimensions available to apply statistics, and then offer new opportunities to disentangle small scale ocean turbulence from the larger scale (ensemble mean) flow, as well as their interactions. In such a framework, ocean turbulence is usually defined as the ensemble spread, reflecting the intrinsic variability that spontaneously emerges from the ocean, while the larger scale flow is defined as the ensemble mean, and whose variability is controlled by the forcing. Here, we aim at leveraging results of recently produced, submesoscale-permitting (1/60o) ensemble simulations of a forced ocean model configuration of the western Mediterranean Sea (MEDWEST60, 20 members) to diagnose the role played by ocean turbulence in the Kinetic Energy (KE) budget of these simulations. We develop for this purpose offline tools to compute such budget based on the NEMO modeling platform, which we aim at presenting.


These offline tools are part of the CDFTOOLS, a FORTRAN based package developed to export the NEMO code into an offline version of it for post-processing. Our contributions have been to include the momentum budget of the code into this package, on which kinetic energy builds upon. We first evaluate the accuracy of these offline computations against online estimates over a short period of time. At the model time step, this accuracy reaches  up to 10-3 -10-4 for time rate of change, advection and pressure work, and 10-1 for vertical dissipation. The surface pressure correction associated with the time-splitting scheme has proven difficult to implement offline, due to 1/ sub-domain boundaries instabilities in the computation of the barotropic mode, and 2/ replication of the interpolation scheme used in NEMO for atmospheric forcing fields (atmospheric surface pressure, evaporation, precipitations, runoff). The use of one hour model outputs is found to degrade the accuracy of the offline estimates by up to one order of magnitude locally. We then present and discuss preliminary applications of these diagnostics to the MEDWEST60 ensemble simulation model outputs (hourly averages).

How to cite: Jamet, Q., Dewar, W. K., Penduff, T., Le Sommer, J., Leroux, S., Molines, J.-M., and Gula, J.: Analyzing the Kinetic Energy budget of submesoscale-permitting ensemble simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13127, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13127, 2021.

EGU21-16207 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Partitioning fast flow from stratified groundwater flow modulates seasonal variations of old streamwater transit times

Jean Marçais, Louis A. Derry, Luca Guillaumot, Luc Aquilina, and Jean-Raynald de Dreuzy

We develop a parsimonious model-data fusion to capture the groundwater contribution to stream discharge and its effect on variable transit times. The modeling strategy relies on partitioning infiltration between 1) Boussinesq groundwater flows in shallow aquifers and 2) fast flows close to the surface. Partitioning is controlled by the relative aquifer saturation inducing groundwater return flows and fast flows on saturated soils. Flowpaths are computed with a new 2D particle tracking algorithm to obtain transient transit time distributions. Hydraulic conductivity, total and drainable porosities are constrained through a sequential calibration strategy based on discharge time series and point-based CFC tracer data. Application on a 43 km2 catchment in Brittany (France) highlights the important contribution of old groundwater flow dynamics to streamflow's transit time distributions in all seasons under temperate climate conditions. The calibrated model succeeds in reproducing CFC-based groundwater ages as well as discharge dynamics at the outlet of the catchment. Slow groundwater circulation (baseflow and return flow) represents ca. 75% of the streamflow with strong seasonal variations (between 40 and 95%). Mean transit times are ca. 13 years, varying between 5 and 20 years, inversely proportional to the groundwater contribution. These seasonal variations are dominantly due to the flow partitioning between the aquifer and soil compartments with a second-order contribution of the groundwater transit times stratification.

How to cite: Marçais, J., Derry, L. A., Guillaumot, L., Aquilina, L., and de Dreuzy, J.-R.: Partitioning fast flow from stratified groundwater flow modulates seasonal variations of old streamwater transit times, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16207, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16207, 2021.

Reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and in particular fossil carbon dioxide, is essential to sustain future human life on Earth. In this perspective, residual biomass becomes a potentially valuable resource to substitute fossil carbon, in particular when considered under the angle of national strategic planning. Yet, diverting this flow from its current (or baseline) use implies ensuring a net societal benefit, i.e. an overall enhanced environmental and economic performance. Here, we present an assessment covering the whole of France. The purpose of our study is three-fold: (i) providing and demonstrating a methodology for high-resolution spatial quantification of key residual biomass streams including Primary Forestry Residues (PFR), Agricultural Residues (crop residues, manure, prunings), Sewage Sludge, Garden Waste, Food waste (household, industrial); (ii) identifying the current use of these streams and (iii) quantifying, by life cycle assessment, the environmental impacts related to this baseline management. The vision is to supply the quantified minimal environmental performance that future bioeconomy uses of the residual biomasses must have in order to generate an overall improvement compared to today’s baseline. The aim is additionally to develop methods that can be reproduced and used for strategic circular- and bioeconomy planning in other countries (or regions) worldwide.

According to our results, the total biophysical available potential (in PJ y-1) is: PFR: 158 PJ y-1 [83-261]; Crop residues: 1178 PJ y-1 [988-1369]; Manure: 433 PJ y-1 [345-520];  pruning residues: 57 PJ y-1 [30-85]; garden waste: 61 PJ y-1 [49-73];  household biowaste currently separately collected: 103 PJ y-1 [83-124]; household biowaste not collected today: 89 PJ y-1 [81-97]; agri-industrial biowaste: 81.4 PJ y-1 [65-98]; sewage sludge: 15.2 PJ y-1 [12-18]. This totals ~2100 PJ y-1, the equivalent of 20% of the primary energy supply in France. The current uses vary among the streams, including on-land decay, open-air burning, domestic heat use, direct use as organic fertilizer, use as organic fertilizer after composting or use as bedding, production of heat and power following biogas production through anaerobic digestion, mulch production and incineration amongst the most common ones. When services are supplied (e.g. heat, electricity, fertilizers), the life cycle assessment considered the avoided impacts induced by the substituted products (e.g. natural gas, mineral fertilizers).

To our knowledge, such a wide platform covering as many residual streams at this level of spatial resolution (from 10-m to the European NUTS-3 level), incorporating uncertainties and life cycle inventories on the current uses of streams, has never been elaborated until now.

How to cite: Hamelin, L. and Karan, S.: The role of residual biomass in the French transition towards low fossil C use: spatial quantification, current uses, and life cycle assessment of the baseline, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16493, 2021.

Continued fossil fuel burning is likely to increase CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere to previously unknown levels and emissions will continue to outpace uptake, unless limiting action is taken. This paper presents new approaches to mitigate emissions and drawdown atmospheric CO2 , that is, new combinations of developing and existing technologies in offshore settings. We consider the permanent and safe geological storage of carbon dioxide (CCS) through in situ carbon mineralization and the potential for CO2  uptake and disposal in offshore basalt formations. The CCS concept in general aims to separate CO2 from industrial emissions, and/or directly remove it from the air, and permanently store it underground. Integrating these technologies with renewable (wind) energy in offshore settings may offer a scalable, long-term climate mitigation choice that warrants early consideration. Current studies of co-located opportunities and new offshore demonstration projects are considered. 

 

How to cite: Goldberg, D.: Disposing of CO2 in basaltic rocks:  opportunities to upscale storage and co-locate sites with offshore renewable (wind) power , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3373, 2021.

EGU21-2878 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Biomass fast pyrolysis: Chemistry and thermodynamics

Marion Carrier, Manel Nasfi, Malek Ajam, Laurent Cassayre, and Sylvain Salvador

The project, PYROKINE, aims at developing new modeling approaches adapted to one of the most promising thermochemical processes, fast pyrolysis, applied to the conversion of contaminated lignocellulosic biomass. The fast pyrolysis converts solid biomass into volatiles and a limited amount of char. The volatiles are then rapidly quenched resulting in a high yield of bio-oil, 70-75wt% of the starting material on a dry basis. The liquified biomass can be further upgraded catalytically or blended to produce new advanced biofuels. In addition to the yield, the product distribution determines their quality, and this is critically dependent on biomass type and its temperature-time history. In the present study, we propose to establish a dynamic model adaptable to the conversion of different biomass types under various pyrolysis regimes according to two research programs.

The first program consists of integrating coupled chemical kinetics into heat and mass transfer models for biomass fast pyrolysis. So far, the coupled kinetic model combining the Friedman isoconversional method with a Distributed Activated Energy Model (DAEM) has been developed and validated with a set of experimental data obtained under slow heating conditions. The apparent activation energy, Eα, one of the kinetic parameters that describes the overall reactivity of the feedstock, has been plotted versus the extent of conversion, α, to assess the chemical complexity of the reaction. For example, the lignin was found to degrade into two successive stages from 174 to 280kJ/mol between 0.05<α<0.60 and up to 322kJ/mol until α=0.85. Two kinetic parameter datasets were derived and used as inputs for the double-Gaussian DAEM that successfully fitted experimental curves. This chemical kinetic model will be combined with heat and mass transport models according to the type of thermal regimes.

The second program focuses on the thermodynamic and kinetic modeling of the intermediate liquid compound in the presence of metallic species. This liquid appears in the early stages of the fast pyrolysis and results from the softening of biomass. Its physico-chemical characteristics are the origin of the multiphasic nature of the biomass fast pyrolysis. A preliminary study has allowed the development of a thermodynamic model and headspace coupled to gas chromatographic methods to predict the vapor-liquid equilibrium for model liquid mixtures. The system studied was a closed system with air and a solution mixture of five components (acetic acid, hydroxyacetone, phenol, furfural, and methanol) near its boiling point, 90°C, and under atmospheric pressure. To predict the thermophysical parameters of the solution, the Soave-Redlich-Kwong (SRK) equation of state coupled with Modified Huron-Vidal (MHV2) mixing rules incorporating the UNIversal Functionnal Activity Coefficient (UNIFAC) model was implemented. Concentration measurements in vapor and liquid phases were compared to vapor-liquid equilibrium data. A quantitative agreement between simulated and measured concentrations in the liquid phase was achieved with this combined state-predictive model of the SRK-MHV2-UNIFAC model, confirming that it accounts well for the nonidealities. This thermodynamic model will need to be coupled with a chemical kinetic model in the presence of inorganics to reveal the role of those contaminants on the chemistry.

How to cite: Carrier, M., Nasfi, M., Ajam, M., Cassayre, L., and Salvador, S.: Biomass fast pyrolysis: Chemistry and thermodynamics, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2878, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2878, 2021.

EGU21-5879 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

Organic photovoltaics as a solution to overcome growing atmospheric carbon emissions

Hervé Tchognia Nkuissi, Amina Labiod, Stéphanie Ferry, Patrick Lévêque, and Thomas Heiser

Nowadays, climate change is a reality because energy demand is mostly satisfied by fossil fuels which are limited resources and also responsible for greenhouse gas emissions. Actions have to be undertaken to overcome this issue. Among the solutions proposed to this is the development and use of new energy sources called renewable energies. By renewable energy, we understand energies coming from the sun, wind, geothermal, water, or biomass. Of these, solar energy is one of the most abundant, clean, effective, and easily deployed. One of the efficient ways to exploit solar energy is photovoltaics.

Two decades of research have allowed organic photovoltaics to appear today as an alternative to their conventional and inorganic counterparts. However, several issues have to be addressed in order to ease their production on an industrial level. Bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells based on the blend of two types of conjugated molecules acting as an electron donor (hole transport) and an electron acceptor (electron transport) are the most efficient organic solar cells. Further, using non-fullerene acceptors (or NFA) in these BHJ solar cells have recently gained a broad interest due to their great potential to realize high conversion efficiencies (more than 18%) with a long lifetime over the conventional polymer/fullerene blend solar cells.

Here we provide an overview of the recent progress of different existing and growing photovoltaic technologies. We also provide prospects for the future development of organic photovoltaic devices.

How to cite: Tchognia Nkuissi, H., Labiod, A., Ferry, S., Lévêque, P., and Heiser, T.: Organic photovoltaics as a solution to overcome growing atmospheric carbon emissions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5879, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5879, 2021.

EGU21-6551 | vPICO presentations | CL4.34

urban vegetation of algiers : urban ecology approach

Bilal Ighil agha

In the 21st century, where problems related to the city are legion (climate change, disease, depression, crime, etc.), urban ecology promises to provide concrete and effective solutions to enable humanity to live and the planet to breathe.

In a southern metropolis such as Algiers, these seemingly endless urban problems are becoming more acute due to a galloping population and an unbridled expansion of the urban fabric. This expansion is often at the expense of green spaces.

In this way, we worked on methodologies that will enable us to quantify the layout, condition and influence of these green spaces and to develop more appropriate management plans to optimize there functions.

We also carried out a preliminary study for the landscape analysis and spatialization of urban plants, to be able to deepen the study later and create an interrogative spatial database to help decision-making.

How to cite: Ighil agha, B.: urban vegetation of algiers : urban ecology approach, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6551, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6551, 2021.

CL5.1.1 – Novel and quantitative methods for reconstructing continental palaeoenvironments and palaeohydrology

EGU21-1311 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Using Triple Oxygen Isotopes of Pedogenic Carbonate to Identify Ancient Evaporation: First Steps from Modern Soils

Julia Kelson, Tyler Huth, Benjamin Passey, and Naomi Levin

The stable isotope composition of soil carbonates is commonly used to reconstruct continental paleoclimates, but its utility is limited by an incomplete understanding of how soil carbonates form. In particular, it is often unclear if the parent soil water has been enriched in 18O due to evaporation, muddying our ability to infer meteoric water δ18O from paleosol carbonates. Here we demonstrate the potential use of triple oxygen isotopes (termed ∆’17O) to account for evaporation and identify formation process through a study of modern soil carbonate isotope values.  Evaporation results in a decreased slope in the relationship between δ17O and δ18O and deviations from the global meteoric water line, such that ∆’17O values in soil water and resulting carbonate decrease with increased evaporation. We report ∆’17O values of CO2 derived from soil carbonates and measured as O2 on a mass spectrometer, with 1-4 replicates per soil carbonate. We find a step-like relationship between ∆’17O in globally distributed Holocene soil carbonate samples and aridity, where aridity is defined using the aridity index (AI, mean annual precipitation/potential evapotranspiration). Low ∆’17O values occur in hyper-arid climates (AI < 0.05), with mean ∆’17O = -0.164 ‰, SD = 0.004 ‰. A transition, or step, occurs in arid climates (AI from 0.05 to 0.2), with ∆’17O values that range from -0.129 ‰ to -0.165 ‰, and mean ∆’17O of -0.148 ‰, SD = 0.010‰. High ∆’17O values occur in semi-arid through humid climates (AI >0.5) with mean ∆’17O of -0.135 ‰, SD = 0.008 ‰.  The lowest observed ∆’17O values are consistent with extensive evaporation – for context, the ∆’17O values are similar to those measured in lacustrine carbonates from closed lake basins. The highest ∆’17O values are consistent with little soil water evaporation. We interpret the step-like pattern in ∆’17O values as an indication of the threshold in the importance of evaporation vs. transpiration in soil dewatering. This data highlights the potential to use ∆’17O to identify the extent of evaporation in paleosol carbonates. Eventually, we hope that this novel technique will lead to quantitative accounting of evaporation in soil water and improved reconstructions of meteoric water δ18O from soil carbonates. The ability to constrain the evaporative conditions of soil carbonate formation will also aid interpretations of δ13C (including pCO2 reconstructions) and clumped isotope-based temperatures. These efforts will ultimately aid in our ability to integrate paleoclimate data from soil carbonates with data from other terrestrial records.  

How to cite: Kelson, J., Huth, T., Passey, B., and Levin, N.: Using Triple Oxygen Isotopes of Pedogenic Carbonate to Identify Ancient Evaporation: First Steps from Modern Soils, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1311, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1311, 2021.

EGU21-7071 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Millennial-timescale reconstruction of Upper Pleistocene temperature and precipitation derived from earthworm calcite granules in western European loess profiles

Charlotte Prud'homme, Peter Fischer, Olaf Jöris, Christine Hatté, Mathias Vinnepand, Hubert Vonhof, Olivier Moine, Andreas Vött, and Kathryn Fitzsimmons

Loess-Palaeosol Sequences (LPS) represent the most extensive Quaternary terrestrial archives. Although researchers have long been able to identify short-lived climatic changes in LPS through stratigraphy, until recently we have lacked the tools to 1) identify how continuous loess archives may be, and to what extent short-lived, millennial-timescale climatic events were recorded in loess sediments, and to 2) quantitatively reconstruct past climate parameters from loess proxies. Stratigraphically, the impact of short-lived climatic cycles can be observed in the form of primary loess deposits reflecting cold stadial conditions, intercalated with arctic and boreal brown soils and tundra gley horizons indicating milder interstadials. Short-term establishment and subsequent degradation of an active permafrost layer can also be identified in temperate-latitude loess such as that found in the Rhine Valley of central-western Europe. Recently developed proxy methods can now be used to quantify climatic parameters such as temperature and precipitation in these regions 1,2. Associated with radiocarbon dating, these new approaches will vastly improve our understanding of continental environmental changes through the Upper Pleistocene, which can now be compared at high temporal resolution with marine and ice core records. In particular, the quantity and stable isotope ratios of crystalline calcite granules (> 0.8 mm), secreted by earthworms (Lumbricus sp.)  at the soil surface, preserve climate information contemporaneous with deposition of the loess sediment.

In this study, we assess the utility of the earthworm calcite granules (ECG) approach by reconstructing temperature and precipitation at high resolution between 50 and 15 ka from two temporally overlapping loess sequences, Schwalbenberg and Nussloch, situated approximately 200 km apart in the German Rhine Valley. ECG counts down the two profiles reveal millennial-timescale climatic variations; high ECG concentrations associated with pedogenetic horizons suggest milder climatic with increasing biological activity and vegetation cover. Using empirical equations based on 1) observations of modern earthworm response to temperature and 2) the linear relationship between ∆13C values of plants and precipitation, the stable oxygen and carbon isotope compositions from ECGs can be used as direct proxies for warm season temperature and annual soil moisture, respectively. We embed our climate reconstructions within Bayesian age models based on radiocarbon dating of ECG in order to establish precise correlations between the two sequences and with other climatic archives. We find that ECGs provide valuable proxies able to meaningfully quantify palaeoclimate variations from terrestrial deposits over millennial timescales. Our results further show periods of quasi-simultaneous climatic change in the Northern Hemisphere, closely linking the climatic signatures recorded in the Upper Pleistocene of Schwalbenberg and Nussloch to the Greenland ice core records.

References: 

1. Prud’homme, C. et al. Palaeotemperature reconstruction during the Last Glacial from δ18O of earthworm calcite granules from Nussloch loess sequence, Germany. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 442, 13–20 (2016).

2. Prud’homme, C. et al. δ 13C signal of earthworm calcite granules: a new proxy for palaeoprecipitation reconstructions during the Last Glacial in Western Europe. Quat. Sci. Rev. 179, 158–166 (2018).

How to cite: Prud'homme, C., Fischer, P., Jöris, O., Hatté, C., Vinnepand, M., Vonhof, H., Moine, O., Vött, A., and Fitzsimmons, K.: Millennial-timescale reconstruction of Upper Pleistocene temperature and precipitation derived from earthworm calcite granules in western European loess profiles, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7071, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7071, 2021.

EGU21-10368 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Climate Variability reconstructed from La Cueva Chica speleothems for the last 13 ka BP: implications for Megafauna in Southern Patagonia, Chile.

Carole Nehme, Dominique Todisco, Sebastian Breitenbach, Isabelle Couchoud, Igor Girault, Fabiana Martin, Luis Borrerro, John Hellstrom, Rik TJallingi, and Philippe Claeys

Investigating palaeoclimate records is of major importance for evaluating the impact of past forcing factors on the evolution of ecosystems, megafauna and human dispersal, especially in Southern Patagonia where few records are available. We report on a 40 cm long flowstone core S6, and fragments of flowstone and a stalagmite from Cueva Chica. The samples were radiometrically dated (U-Th & 14C) to construct age-depth models for the proxy profiles (δ13C, δ18O, and chemical composition). The speleothem proxy data are further informed by both petrographic analysis of the flowstone, and monitoring data. The main objectives of this work are to: i) reconstruct past climate variations using geochemical analyses conducted on the speleothems, and ii) assess the palaeoclimatic context of megafauna extinction in the area. The flowstone core S6 grew discontinuously from ~13 ka to ~1 ka with several possible hiatuses at ~10 ka BP, from 5.7 to 3.0 ka BP, and 2.5 to 1.8 ka BP (interpolated ages). Sample S8 grew from 6.8 to 5.8 ka BP and after 1.2 ka BP. Stable isotopes analyzed at sub-centennial resolution show a 3‰ range for δ18O, and more than 14‰ for δ13C, and the isotope ratios covary along the entire record. These changes are likely caused by kinetic fractionation and prior calcite precipitation (PCP), controlled mostly by changes in moisture availability. The sensitivity of the proxies to hydrological changes and PCP is further tested with indicators using μXRF element data. The multiproxy record from Cueva Chica suggests a wet phase from ~13 to 9 ka BP, likely related to strong westerlies in the Southern Hemisphere, preceded by a short dry/cold spell at ~13 ka BP. This early Holocene wet phase was followed by a colder/drier period from 8.5 to 5.8 ka BP, likely related to weaker westerlies, especially during the mid-Holocene. High precipitation and strong westerlies prevailed from 3.0 to 2.5 ka BP and in Medieval times. Our paleoclimate record implies that the presence of extensive megafauna, the development of Nothofagus forest and human arrival, all occurred during a climatically favorable wet/warm period ca. 13 to 9 ka BP, after the Antarctic Cold Reversal. However, the deterioration of the vegetation cover at the Cerro Benitez coinciding with high δ13C values excursions was initiated after ca. 11 ka BP. Previous studies suggest an extinction of major megafauna species (e.g., Mylodon, Smilodon, Panthera onca mesembrina) during this wet/warm period. Such climate-driven changes likely reduced the open ecosystem environment and may have led to local decline of herbivore populations. Later cooling/drying after ca. 9 ka may have contributed to the disappearance of megafauna and other large mamals (e.g., Hippidion Saldiasi).

How to cite: Nehme, C., Todisco, D., Breitenbach, S., Couchoud, I., Girault, I., Martin, F., Borrerro, L., Hellstrom, J., TJallingi, R., and Claeys, P.: Climate Variability reconstructed from La Cueva Chica speleothems for the last 13 ka BP: implications for Megafauna in Southern Patagonia, Chile., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10368, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10368, 2021.

EGU21-7889 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Cryogenic cave carbonates in the Dolomites (Northern Italy): insights into Younger Dryas cooling and seasonal precipitation

Gabriella Koltai, Christoph Spötl, Alexander H. Jarosch, and Hai Cheng

In the European Alps, the Younger Dryas (YD) was characterized by the last major glacier advance with equilibrium line altitudes being ~220 to 290 m lower than during the Little Ice Age and also by the development of rock glaciers. Dating of these geomorphic features, however, is associated with substantial uncertainties leading to considerable ambiguities on the internal structure of this stadial, the most intensively studied one of the last glacial period.

Our study utilizes a novel paleoclimate archive, coarse crystalline cryogenic cave carbonates (hereafter CCC), that allows to precisely constrain when ~ 0°C conditions prevailed in the shallow subsurface in the past, often related to permafrost thawing events.

Here we presents the first record of CCC from the Dolomites (Southern Alps). In contrast to many studies from Central European caves these speleothems formed not during a major climate warming but within a prominent stadial. 230Th-dating of the CCC indicates sustained negative temperatures close to  ~0°C between ~12.6 and ~12.2 ka BP at about 50 m below the surface, initiating the slow freezing of dripwater-induced meltwater pockets in perennial cave ice. This in combination with thermal modelling argues for a cooling of ≤ 3°C at the Allerød-YD transition at this high-alpine site in the Southern Alps. Our data suggest that autumns and early winters in the early part of the YD were relatively snow-rich, resulting in a stable winter snow cover at this site. The snow cover insulated the subsurface and allowed the cave interior to remain close to the freezing point (0°C) year-round, promoting CCC formation.

The main phase of CCC precipitation at ~12.2 ka BP coincides with the mid-YD transition recorded in other archives across Europe. Based on thermal modelling we propose that CCC formation at ~12.2 ka BP was most likely associated with a slight warming of approximately +1°C in conjunction with drier autumns and early winters in the second half of the YD. These changes triggered CCC formation in this alpine cave as well as ice glacier retreat and rock glacier expansion in the Alps. Our study demonstrates that CCCs can provide quantitative constraints on paleotemperature and seasonally resolved precipitation changes.

How to cite: Koltai, G., Spötl, C., Jarosch, A. H., and Cheng, H.: Cryogenic cave carbonates in the Dolomites (Northern Italy): insights into Younger Dryas cooling and seasonal precipitation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7889, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7889, 2021.

EGU21-12794 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Impact of the Toba eruption on rainfall – a speleothem record suggests multi-staged eruption affected EASM

Sebastian F.M. Breitenbach, Emma Finestone, Yanjun Cai, Pete Scott, Nicole Boivin, and Michael Petraglia

The Toba eruption, marked by the Younger Toba Tuff (YTT), was the largest volcanic event of the Quaternary. Dated to 73.88±0.6 ka BP (2σ), this eruption must have been witnessed by humans globally, even if only through indirect effects of multi-year adverse weather patterns, or atmospheric phenomena. It has been proposed that the YTT acted as trigger or accelerator for Greenland Stadial 20 (GS20). Its global climatic impact is evidenced by data from as far as southwestern USA, Antarctica, and Greenland (Polyak et al. 2017, Svensson et al. 2013). Whether this event also caused a human population bottleneck (Ambrose 2003) remains debated (Petraglia et al. 2007, Ge et al. 2020).

Here we combine stable isotopes with laser ablation based multi-element data to test the impact of the YTT on the East Asian Summer Monsoon using a stalagmite from China.  U-series dating indicates that stalagmite XT5 grew between 87±0.3 to 50±0.4 ka BP. Oxygen and carbon isotope ratios show significant changes linked to GS20, with several large positive excursions between 74 and 70 ka BP suggesting severe droughts. The notion of severe drying is supported by the Sr profile. Several spikes in rare earth elements (REE: Y, La, Ce, Nd, Yb) occurred concurrent with δ18O, δ13C, and Sr increases.

The increasing δ13C and δ18O values resulted from reduced effective infiltration linked to a longer-term reorganization of the EASM system. The observed REE dynamics and can be interpreted as indicative of large eruption events. Assigning REE spikes to individual eruptions like the YTT remains ambiguous, but agreement with acidity peaks in ice cores (Svensson et al. 2013) suggests that our REE events tracks eruption history over the interval discussed here. Our δ18O, δ13C, and Sr records suggest repeated EASM weakening and regional-scale rainfall reduction in response to volcanic events indicated by REE peaks. Comparison of the REE and Sr profiles further suggests that drying was initiated or exacerbated by these eruptions.

Our new multi-proxy record supports the hypothesis of repeated tropical eruptions that led to several significant weakening episodes of the EASM. The current data do not answer the question whether the YTT initiated GS20 but support the notion of multi-decadal impacts on regional circulation and rainfall across East Asia.

 

References:

Ambrose S. (2003) Population bottleneck, in: Robinson, R. (Ed.), Genetics, volume 3. Macmillan Reference, New York, 167-171

Ge Y. et al. (2020) Understanding the overestimated impact of the Toba volcanic super-eruption on global environments and ancient hominins. Quat Int. 559, 24-33

Petraglia M. et al. (2007) Middle Paleolithic Assemblages from the Indian Subcontinent Before and After the Toba Super-Eruption. Science 317, 114-116

Polyak V. et al. (2017) Rapid speleothem δ13C change in southwestern North America coincident with Greenland stadial 20 and the Toba (Indonesia) supereruption. Geology 45, 843-846

Svensson A. et al. (2013) Direct linking of Greenland and Antarctic ice cores at the Toba eruption (74 ka BP): Climate of the Past 9, 749-766

How to cite: Breitenbach, S. F. M., Finestone, E., Cai, Y., Scott, P., Boivin, N., and Petraglia, M.: Impact of the Toba eruption on rainfall – a speleothem record suggests multi-staged eruption affected EASM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12794, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12794, 2021.

EGU21-3381 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Intraseasonal Hydroclimate Variability in the Yucatán Peninsula During the Maya Terminal Classic Period: A Proxy Record of Palaeo-MJO?

Amy Frappier, Brian Frappier, Martín Medina-Elizalde, and Maria Fernanda Lases-Hernández

Waves in the tropical atmosphere modulate rainfall and water vapor at the intraseasonal scale, including equatorial Rossby waves, Kelvin waves, and tropical disturbances organized by the planetary scale Madden-Julien Oscillation (MJO). The MJO’s regions of enhanced and suppressed convection travel slowly eastward, resulting in a characteristic 30-60 day rainfall cycle at tropical sites. The MJO’s pace and intensity vary over time and by location, influencing monsoons, El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events, and tropical cyclone genesis/intensification. MJO-induced teleconnections influence extratropical weather anomalies, i.e. as atmospheric rivers. Despite forecast challenges, modeling studies indicate MJO sensitivity to anthropogenic climate forcing.

Records of pre-instrumental MJO behavior would advance efforts to assess tropical palaeoclimate and hydroclimate sensitivity to climate forcing factors. Palaeoclimate records of MJO intraseasonal variability have not been captured due to the scale of MJO relative to proxy resolution. Promising weekly dripwater monitoring results from Rio Secreto cave, Quintana Roo, Mexico, however, show the influence of sub-seasonal weather events on speleothem stable isotope proxy records.  We report a possible late Holocene palaeo-MJO signal in a ~weekly stalagmite oxygen isotope (δ18O value) record from Cueva Tzabnah, Yucatán, Mexico.

We re-sampled a well-studied stalagmite, Chaac, across the Maya Terminal Classic Period (c. 800-950 C.E.) and instrumental era. With continuous micromilling at 6.5 μm spacing and stable isotope analysis (CM-2 micromill and small-vial Kiel IV+MAT253), we reached ~50 samples/year. The re-sampled Chaac record reveals expected interannual-decadal hydroclimate signals and better resolves short-term variability. A recurrent pattern of δ18O value oscillations over about 4-12 samples (representing approx. 1-3 months). The amplitude of these intraseasonal-scale oscillations is around 0.3 - 0.5‰, smaller than annual/interannual variations. The intraseasonal pattern varies in amplitude, clarity, and frequency over time, similar to the modern MJO.

Intraseasonal stable isotopic oscillations in Chaac during the modern and Maya Terminal Classic Period most likely reflect local intraseasonal hydroclimate variability. Because this scale of rainfall variations is driven primarily by the MJO, we are investigating this pattern as a possible palaeo-MJO record. We will present the new Chaac record and results of wavelet analysis, and discuss prospects for intraseasonal tropical paleoclimate dynamics.

How to cite: Frappier, A., Frappier, B., Medina-Elizalde, M., and Lases-Hernández, M. F.: Intraseasonal Hydroclimate Variability in the Yucatán Peninsula During the Maya Terminal Classic Period: A Proxy Record of Palaeo-MJO?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3381, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3381, 2021.

EGU21-13057 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Partitioning of trace metals in cave (and cave-analogue) carbonate precipitates – towards a quantitative hydrological proxy in stalagmites 

Sebastian N. Höpker, Bedartha Goswami, Megan Grainger, Sebastian F. M. Breitenbach, Maximilian Hansen, and Adam Hartland

Speleothems (secondary cave carbonate deposits) are particularly valuable for studying past climates over a range of temporal and spatial scales, owing to their continuous growth and exceptional viability for radiometric dating. However, the interpretation of many speleothem-based palaeoenvironmental proxies (e.g., stable isotope ratios δ18O and δ13C) in terms of particular environmental or climatic controls remains challenging, and is typically limited to qualitative reconstructions of past environmental conditions and dynamics.

In this study, we develop a novel class of quantitative hydrological proxies by exploring the kinetic behaviour of a suite of first-row transition metals (e.g., Ni, Cu, Co) found in stalagmites. The transport of these elements from the surface to the cave is strongly controlled by the binding to natural organic matter (NOM) present in infiltrating waters. The rate of dissociation of such metal-NOM complexes at the dripwater-stalagmite interface has recently been suggested to determine the availability of these elements for the incorporation into precipitates (Hartland & Zitoun, 2018). The link between NOM-complex dissociation and metal availability for deposition presents an opportunity to quantitatively relate respective carbonate metal concentrations to the time available for complexes to disintegrate and release metals within the thin water films on stalagmite surfaces.

We present preliminary analyses assessing trace metal kinetics and partitioning in monitored natural cave settings, as well as cave-analogue experimental setups. Our findings demonstrate the contrasting controls on the concentrations of different elements in speleothems, and highlight the potential for kinetically-limited elements in stalagmites to enable quantitative estimations of past hydrological variability.

 

References:

Hartland, A., Zitoun, R. (2018) Transition metal availability to speleothems controlled by organic binding ligands. Geochem. Persp. Let. 8, 22–25.

How to cite: Höpker, S. N., Goswami, B., Grainger, M., Breitenbach, S. F. M., Hansen, M., and Hartland, A.: Partitioning of trace metals in cave (and cave-analogue) carbonate precipitates – towards a quantitative hydrological proxy in stalagmites , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13057, 2021.

EGU21-11310 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Trace metal variability in Puerto Rican speleothems and drip waters: Indicators for (past) tropical cyclone activity?

Sophie Warken, Norbert Frank, Nils Schorndorf, Aaron Mielke, Lea Kuchalski, Frank Keppler, Rolf Vieten, Julius Förstel, Steffen Therre, Amos Winter, Andrea Schröder-Ritzrau, and Adam Hartland

In the tropical Americas, extreme precipitation events such as hurricanes are responsible for enormous damage and numerous fatalities each year. However, projections of hydro-climatic change and tropical cyclone (TC) activity in Central America and the Caribbean for the next decades are still challenging, requiring more reconstructions of past precipitation and TC activity. In tropical speleothems, stable oxygen isotope values (δ18O) are an often used proxy for precipitation amount, and in some cases TC activity, but may be masked by various effects such as evaporation or kinetic effects inside the cave, temperature, or variable moisture sources and trajectories.

Here we investigate the potential of trace metals in speleothems and drip waters from Larga Cave, Puerto Rico, as complementary proxies for past effective infiltration, and hence precipitation amount. The analysis of transition metal ratios in drip waters from 2014 to 2019 reveal a seasonal variation, with peaks in the Cu/Ni (and Cu/Co) ratios potentially reflecting the intensity of the prior wet season. The suggested imprint of Hurricanes Bertha (2014) and Maria (2017) in the drip water suggests that transition metal ratios might be even indicators of (past) tropical cyclone activity.

Laser ablation ICPMS analyses of speleothems from the same cave support the interpretation of a potential climate signal in the transition metal ratios. Both higher Cu/Ni and Cu/Co values are found during presumably warmer and wetter phases, such as e.g. during the late Holocene, as well as at the onsets of Dansgaard/Oeschger interstadials including the Bolling/Allerod (14.6-12.8 ka BP). Replicated records of the past 400 years combined with stable isotope values of oxygen and carbon (δ13C) will provide a test of the underlying mechanisms driving the observed variability on different timescales. Comparison with other reconstructions highlights the potential of Cu/Ni (and Cu/Co) ratios in speleothems for hydro-climate and past precipitation variability reconstruction.

How to cite: Warken, S., Frank, N., Schorndorf, N., Mielke, A., Kuchalski, L., Keppler, F., Vieten, R., Förstel, J., Therre, S., Winter, A., Schröder-Ritzrau, A., and Hartland, A.: Trace metal variability in Puerto Rican speleothems and drip waters: Indicators for (past) tropical cyclone activity?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11310, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11310, 2021.

EGU21-9545 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Rainwater isotopes in central Vietnam controlled by two oceanic moisture sources and rainout effects

Annabel Wolf, William H. G. Roberts, Vasile Ersek, Kathleen R. Johnson, and Michael L. Griffiths

Oxygen isotopes are commonly used proxies in paleoclimate research, however, a correct interpretation requires a detailed understanding of processes controlling isotope variability for a specific site.  A common interpretation for oxygen isotopes in precipitation across the Asian monsoon region, links the seasonal and interannual variability to changes in the summer monsoon strength.

However, some locations within tropical Asia do not receive rainfall during the summer monsoon season. In central Vietnam most of the annual rainfall falls during autumn instead of summer, making central Vietnam ideal to investigate processes controlling rainwater isotope variability, independent from the summer monsoon. By using rainwater isotopes, collected over five years, and moisture uptake simulations for these time periods, we investigate the seasonal cycle and interannual variability of hydrological processes in central Vietnam.

Our results show that the seasonal variability is dominated by a shift in moisture source from the Indian Ocean in summer to the South China Sea (western Pacific) from autumn to spring. The different source locations are reflected by an increase in δ18O values from around − 8 to − 10‰ during summer to values between 0 and − 3‰ during winter/spring. Further, we show that the amount effect and the occurrence of tropical cyclones, which are typical for the region, have no effect on a seasonal to interannual scale. Instead, we find that the timing of the seasonal ITCZ migration is a driving component of variability on these time scales.

How to cite: Wolf, A., Roberts, W. H. G., Ersek, V., Johnson, K. R., and Griffiths, M. L.: Rainwater isotopes in central Vietnam controlled by two oceanic moisture sources and rainout effects, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9545, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9545, 2021.

EGU21-1065 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Levoglucosan in speleothems: An evaluation of various sample preparation methods.

Julia Homann, Thorsten Hoffmann, Denis Scholz, and Sebastian Breitenbach

Secondary mineral deposits in caves, such as stalagmites or flowstones, are valuable paleoclimate archives because they have several advantages over other environmental archives. These include stable in-cave conditions, protecting the speleothems from external influences, and the potential to precisely date samples up to 600,000 years using 230Th/U-dating. [1] Supplementing established climate proxies, such as stable isotopes and trace elements, organic proxies have been increasingly used in recent years to inform on local vegetation and soil dynamics. [2]

Biomass burning events are major sources of atmospheric particulate matter that influences global and local climate. [3] Investigating fire proxies in paleoclimate archives may therefore help determine the interactions of climate, hydrology, and fire activity. Levoglucosan, an anhydrosugar, naturally only originates from the combustion of cellulose and thus constitutes a biomass burning marker. Analysis of levoglucosan in sediments has shown high correlation with traditional burning markers, such as black charcoal. [4] Mannosan and galactosan, both stereoisomers of levoglucosan, are formed during combustion of hemicellulose. Previous work suggests that rather than absolute levoglucosan concentrations the ratio of levoglucosan to its isomers should be considered when characterizing burning events. [5] To date, no data on levoglucosan or its isomers in speleothems has been published, whereas the anhydrosugars are already utilised in other paleoclimate archives, such as sediments and ice cores. [2,3]

We test three approaches (solid phase extraction (SPE), soxhlet extraction and solid/liquid extraction) for the isolation and quantification of anhydrosugars using HILIC-MS instrumentation. As the anhydrosugars are highly polar molecules, extraction from the calcium carbonate matrix and subsequent sample preparation proved challenging. We evaluate the different approaches and compare the resulting concentrations and assumed recoveries. We find that the anhydrosugars do not show significant retention on any of the evaluated SPE materials. While solid/liquid extractions lead to detectable analyte concentrations, soxhlet extractions with methanol or dichloromethane/methanol mixtures are more efficient.

 

[1] D. Scholz, D. Hoffmann, Quat. Sci. J. 57 (2008) 52–76 [2] A. Blyth et al. Quat. Sci. Rev. 149 (2016) 1-17 [3] P. Yao et al. J. of Glaciology 59 (2013) 599-611 [4] V. O. Elias et al. Geochim. et Cosmochim. Acta 65 (2001) 267-272. [5] D. Fabbri et al. Atmos. Env. 43 (2009) 2286–2295

How to cite: Homann, J., Hoffmann, T., Scholz, D., and Breitenbach, S.: Levoglucosan in speleothems: An evaluation of various sample preparation methods., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1065, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1065, 2021.

EGU21-9159 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Palaeohydrologic interpretations of Holocene wet episodes recorded in stalagmites from Soreq Cave, Israel: Linking the magnetic and isotopic properties of speleothems

Yuval Burstyn, Ron Shaar, Jonathan Keinan, Yael Ebert, Avner Ayalon, Miryam Bar-Matthews, and Joshua M. Feinberg

Soil-derived magnetic particles trapped in speleothems can retain valuable information on the physiochemical conditions of the overlying soil and changes in the hydrological system. However, a direct link between magnetic and isotopic properties of speleothems has been only qualitatively established and is known to vary regionally. Here we investigate two Holocene speleothems from Soreq Cave, Israel and provide evidence for strong coupling over centennial to millennial timescales between the inflow of magnetic particles (quantified using the magnetic flux index, IRMflux), δ13C, and rainfall amounts. The two stalagmites formed at separate intervals: one at ~9.5 ky BP capturing the transition from pluvial Eastern Mediterranean conditions associated with Sapropel 1 (S1) and a second at 5.4 ky BP recording mid-Holocene wet-dry cycles.

The late-Holocene speleothem shows an anomalously high δ13C episode that is correlated with extremely low IRMflux, indicating minimal contribution from overlying soils due to either (1) recently denuded soils, or (2) high overland and vadose runoff. By contrast, the mid-Holocene sample shows saw-tooth cycles in both δ18O and δ13C, which are interpreted as rapid climate fluctuations associated with rainfall changes. IRMflux during this period varies in-phase with the δ13C cycles; however, the peaks in IRMflux values precede those of the isotope values. The apparent lag in isotopic values may be explained by the faster response of the IRMflux to increased rainfall resulting from the rapid physical translocation of overlying soil particles via groundwater, compared with slower soil organic matter turnover rates, which may vary on timescales of up to thousands of years.

The separate palaeohydrological scenarios resolved from the two speleothems demonstrate how magnetic data can act as a powerful paleo-hydrology proxy, even in weakly-magnetized speleothems growing under semi-arid conditions.

How to cite: Burstyn, Y., Shaar, R., Keinan, J., Ebert, Y., Ayalon, A., Bar-Matthews, M., and Feinberg, J. M.: Palaeohydrologic interpretations of Holocene wet episodes recorded in stalagmites from Soreq Cave, Israel: Linking the magnetic and isotopic properties of speleothems, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9159, 2021.

Sclerochronological methods are described as a means to reconstruct, from increments recorded on a shell transect (i.e. "sclerochonological growth"), the fluctuations in past environments. This was proposed by an erroneous analogy with tree-ring dendrochronology. However, shells do not grow like trees. Almost all molluscan shells grow by adding increments at the shell edge, while preserving their shape. This is called "terminal growth". The advantage of this property is that there is a generic mathematical model that can quantify the shell expansion (morphological growth). 

Nonetheless, this generic model is not compatible with observed shell incrementation and accretion processes. This is because increment widths should increase geometrically in the mathematical model along a transect. We remarked that despite studying the same object, morphodynamics and sclerochronology have followed divergent paths in past decades, without incorporating advances of the other speciality. 

We have now addressed this problem head-on by developing a new mathematical framework to combine incremental shell growth within shell morphodynamics. This model is designed to be able to confront a theoretical prediction of shell incrementation with a measured one. The method combines morphodynamic modelled shapes with 3D shell scans and increments measured from shell transects. 

Our work in this area highlights several heretofore unrecognized fundamental problems in morphodynamics and sclerochronology which concern the way individual variability is accounted for in both areas. Regarding the reconstruction of environmental trends, we find that the arbitrary choice of one particular "best" shell transect and averaging over groups of individuals can be a source of significant bias. It is time to revise shell science methods to consider the entire incremental geometry (or growth 'ring') so that unbiased estimates of environmental changes can be provided using sclerochonological data. 

How to cite: Guarini, J. and Guarini, J.-M.: Confronting shell morphodynamics and sclerochronology: leaving behind phenomenology to move toward integrative laws of growth, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15863, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15863, 2021.

EGU21-10548 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Towards reconstructing Paleo-water activity using lake level and gastropod TE/Ca ratios

Yonaton Goldsmith and Yuval Burstyn

Water activity is the partial pressure of water in a solution, which is a crucial driver of chemical (e.g. dissociation constants) and physical (e.g. evaporation and stable isotope enrichment) properties of water. As such, reconstructing past climate and environmental conditions using lacustrine proxies requires a quantification of past water activity. However, very little research has been conducted on ways to reconstruct this crucial water property. In this research, we present a novel method that potentially can enable reconstructing paleo water activity in closed basin lakes. Closed-basin lakes are lakes with no outlet; thus, the size of the lakes varies as function precipitation and evaporation (P-E), and in turn, can be used to quantitatively reconstruct these conditions. Past climate change altered P-E throughout the geological history causing lakes all around the world to expand (contract), which in turn diluted (concentrated) and reduced (enhanced) lake water activity. To fully understand past hydrological and chemical processes in the lake, it is crucial to quantify the water activity in the lake.

radix sp. is a gastropod that lives at the margins of closed basin lakes. It forms a hard CaCO3 shell, which at death is deposited in the sediments, remains in the geological record, and informs on past lake levels. We sampled radix sp. shells in elevated shorelines of a closed basin lake in North China and from the modern lake shoreline. Radiocarbon ages of the shells span the past 16 ka and are used to construct the lake level curve for the Late Glacial to Holocene (Goldsmith et al., 2017). During this time period the lake level and volume changed substantially; the Early – Mid Holocene lake area high-stand was x7 larger than the modern lake. On these gastropod shells we measured high resolution profiles (sample/length) of TE/Ca ratios (e.g. Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca) using Laser Ablation ICP-MS. We calculated the dissociation constants of the different TE/Ca ratios using modern shells and modern lake water chemistry.

Our preliminary results show that of all elements analysed, Mg/Ca ratios best track lake volume and therefore can be used to reconstruct lake level. The next step will be using gastropod derived lake water chemistry to reconstruct past water activity. This method entails comparing the TE/Ca ratios of Late Glacial and Holocene gastropods with a hydro-chemical model of the lake, derived from a volume history reconstruction of the lake. The hydro-chemical model assumes a simple addition of river water to the modern lake, until the lake reaches the elevation that each gastropod was sampled at. In tandem, these two data sets constrain water chemistry, and the difference between these two estimates should represent the effect changes in water activity have on the disassociation constant between lake water and shell TE/Ca ratios.

Goldsmith, Y., Broecker, W.S., Xu, H., Polissar, P.J., DeMenocal, P.B., Porat, N., Lan, J., Cheng, P., Zhou, W., An, Z., 2017. Northward extent of East Asian monsoon covaries with intensity on orbital and millennial timescales. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 114, 1817–1821.

How to cite: Goldsmith, Y. and Burstyn, Y.: Towards reconstructing Paleo-water activity using lake level and gastropod TE/Ca ratios, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10548, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10548, 2021.

EGU21-6107 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Investigating the spatial heterogeneity of abrupt cooling events during the Lateglacial Interstadial in Britain and Ireland using chironomids and oxygen-isotopes. 

Christopher Francis, Ian Candy, Stefan engels, Ian Matthews, and Adrian Palmer

The Windermere Interstadial (GI-1; c. 14.7-12.9 kyr ago), a relatively warm period at the end of the last glaciation, provides an excellent opportunity to study past abrupt cooling events (ACEs). These events, commonly known as GI-1d and GI-1b, are clearly expressed in the Greenland ice cores and offer some of our best analogues for future events caused by anthropogenic warming. Such ACEs have variable expression in terms of their magnitude across Europe and the North Atlantic region which is likely to reflect the forcing factors which drive them. However, relatively few, spatially uneven, quantitative temperature reconstructions of ACEs exist for NW Europe. Between-site differences in sampling resolution applied and calibration datasets used makes inter-comparisons problematic.

 

We applied chironomid and oxygen-isotope analysis at a high temporal resolution (~decadal) to a number of Windermere Interstadial lake sequences from spatially diverse locations across the British Isles. This dual proxy approach allows for quantitative reconstructions of past climate change and provides insight into seasonal temperature change as well as hydrological regime shifts. Several chironomid calibration datasets were tested to ascertain which provided the most reliable reconstruction. Even across a relatively restricted area such as the British Isles, clear spatial patterns can be observed in ACE strength. GI-1d exhibits greatest magnitude in the North of the region whilst GI-1b is most strongly expressed in the South. The results highlight the pivotal location of the British Isles in further refining our understanding of the forcing mechanism driving ACEs.

How to cite: Francis, C., Candy, I., engels, S., Matthews, I., and Palmer, A.: Investigating the spatial heterogeneity of abrupt cooling events during the Lateglacial Interstadial in Britain and Ireland using chironomids and oxygen-isotopes. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6107, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6107, 2021.

EGU21-8823 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Sub-decadal scale coupling of the Moroccan Sidi Ali lake core record with historical and meteorological data for the last 120 years

Cathleen Kertscher, Johannes Schmidt, Helen Ballasus, Birgit Schneider, Anne Köhler, Maja Flörke-Staats, Elisabeth Dietze, Abdelfattah Benkkadour, Abdeslam Mikdad, Lukas Werther, Alexander Bolland, Sylvain Pichat, Hans von Suchodoletz, William Fletcher, Steffen Mischke, and Christoph Zielhofer

The Western Mediterranean region including the North African desert margin faces major environmental challenges in the backdrop of global climate change in terms of rising temperatures, a higher recurrence of drought events and a decrease in annual precipitation. As a condition to state further prospects, it is crucial to comprehend past and present hydro-climatic patterns. The Moroccan Middle Atlas is considered a transition zone between Atlantic, Mediterranean and Saharan air masses and is therefore of unprecedented interest in order to comprehend regional climate variability and to assess emerging hydrological, geomorphological and ecological impacts. Despite the growing number of limnological studies from the Middle Atlas, there still is a strong need for coupling palaeolimnological results at the sub-recent time scale with historical cartographic information, meteorological variables and underlying climatic forcing. Lake Sidi Ali (33°03’ N, 5°00’ W, 2080 m a.s.l.) provides a unique archive for understanding environmental changes throughout the 20th century. At least for the past 100 years the lake has experienced a minimum of three significant lake level changes in the order of several meters. We were able to reconstruct and quantify these alternations with the help of historical sources, topographic maps and satellite imagery. In addition, we implemented a multi-proxy analytical approach on a 145-cm long sediment record, including δ18O and δ13C isotope analysis of ostracod shells and CNS elemental analysis. A reliable age model based on 25 210Pb measurements and one radiocarbon dated cedar needle enables the linkage of sediment geochemical variations to lake level changes based on an instrumental record and historic topographic maps. We use meteorological precipitation and temperature data to evaluate the main drivers controlling these fluctuations. Furthermore, we have indications for a temporal coupling of Atlantic climate patterns (North Atlantic Oscillation, NAO; Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, AMO) with Sidi Ali lake level development.

How to cite: Kertscher, C., Schmidt, J., Ballasus, H., Schneider, B., Köhler, A., Flörke-Staats, M., Dietze, E., Benkkadour, A., Mikdad, A., Werther, L., Bolland, A., Pichat, S., von Suchodoletz, H., Fletcher, W., Mischke, S., and Zielhofer, C.: Sub-decadal scale coupling of the Moroccan Sidi Ali lake core record with historical and meteorological data for the last 120 years, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8823, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8823, 2021.

EGU21-10262 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

How (not) to quantify hydrological changes using lacustrine carbonates? 

Ola Kwiecien and Jeremy McCormack

Lakes are sensitive to climate change and their sedimentary components play a pivotal role as environmental recorders. In the past, lacustrine carbonates have been utilized in a number of studies attempting at a quantitative reconstruction of rainfall and/or precipitation-evaporation changes based on the biogenic or bulk carbonate δ18O signature. While these studies are built on sound theoretical grounds of mass balance and kinetic isotopic fractionation, the challenge often overlooked is the mineralogically mixed nature of carbonates comprising the bulk.

We report a case study from Lake Van, the world’s largest alkaline lake. Our time series comprising ca. 140 ka documents not only changing proportions of surface water calcite and aragonite, but also diagenetic bottom-water dolomite and, for the first time in Lake Van, early diagenetic bottom-water aragonite. Importantly, in the Lake Van profile primary and early diagenetic carbonates (in particular aragonite) are concurrent rather than mutually exclusive. A comprehensive comparison of the δ18O and δ13C compositions of singled out water column, biogenic (ostracod valves) and diagenetic carbonates shows, that each of the fractions forms a distinctive cluster characteristic for the depth and timing of their formation. Also, the differences between δ18O values of concurrent deep-water carbonate phases exceed what is expected from mineral-specific fractionation. Our data suggest that, an uncritical and unchecked application of the isotopic composition of the bulk carbonate fraction in quantitative climate reconstructions can severely compromise the results. We also advocate that, among different carbonate fractions in Lake Van, monospecific biogenic samples most faithfully reflect the oxygen isotopic composition of the lake water contemporaneous to their deposition, while the carbon composition of biogenic samples is additionally influenced by the organism microhabitat.

How to cite: Kwiecien, O. and McCormack, J.: How (not) to quantify hydrological changes using lacustrine carbonates? , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10262, 2021.

EGU21-16510 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Searching for weather in varves: use of ultra-high-resolution scanning techniques to reconstruct seasonal meteorological conditions

Paul Zander, Maurycy Żarczyński, Wojciech Tylmann, Shauna-kay Rainford, and Martin Grosjean

Varved lake sediments are recognized as valuable archives of paleoclimatic information due to their precise chronological control. However, paleoclimate reconstructions based on the composition of biochemical varves are relatively rare (Zolitschka et al., 2015). We applied novel high-resolution scanning techniques to the varved sediments of Lake Żabińskie, Poland to obtain spatially resolved geochemical data at a resolution of 60 μm covering the period 1966-2019. Relative abundances of elements were measured in resin-embedded sediment slabs using a Bruker M4 Tornado micro-XRF scanner. Chloropigments-a and bacteriopheopigments-a were measured on a wet sediment core using a Specim Hyperspectral core scanner (Butz et al., 2015). The high resolution of the scanning data, and the relatively thick well-preserved varves (average thickness = 6.4 mm), enables a close examination of seasonal scale sediment composition and varve formation processes. Time series of geochemical variables within each varve year were classified into 4 varve type groups based on the dissimilarity measure ψ for multivariate time series (Benito and Birks, 2020; Gordon and Birks, 1974). Based on a Multivariate Analysis Of Variance test, these groups of years experienced significant (p<0.05) differences in seasonal meteorological conditions, particularly wind speed and temperature.  Additionally, a correlation analysis on mean annual geochemical values from the aforementioned scanning techniques and conventional CNS analysis, and seasonal meteorological data revealed significant (p<0.05) correlations with windiness and temperature. Based on these relationships, we applied generalized additive models to predict spring and summer (MAMJJA) temperature and number of windy days (spring through fall), yielding models with significant predictive power. Based on model selection, the variables with the most predictive power for spring and summer temperature were Ti (negative correlation) and total C. The variables with the most predictive power for windiness were Si, sediment accumulation rate, and varve type. This study highlights the usefulness of high-resolution scanning techniques to improve our understanding of varve formation processes and relationships between varve composition and climate variables in biochemical varves.

 

References

Benito, B. M. and Birks, H. J. B.: distantia: an open‐source toolset to quantify dissimilarity between multivariate ecological time‐series, Ecography (Cop.)., 43(5), 660–667, doi:10.1111/ecog.04895, 2020.

Butz, C., Grosjean, M., Fischer, D., Wunderle, S., Tylmann, W. and Rein, B.: Hyperspectral imaging spectroscopy: a promising method for the biogeochemical analysis of lake sediments, J. Appl. Remote Sens., 9(1), 096031, doi:10.1117/1.jrs.9.096031, 2015.

Gordon, A. D. and Birks, H. J. B.: Numerical methods in Quaternary palaeoecology: II. Comparison of pollen diagrams, New Phytol., 73(1), 221–249, doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.1974.tb04621.x, 1974.

Zolitschka, B., Francus, P., Ojala, A. E. K. and Schimmelmann, A.: Varves in lake sediments - a review, Quat. Sci. Rev., 117, 1–41, doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.03.019, 2015.

How to cite: Zander, P., Żarczyński, M., Tylmann, W., Rainford, S., and Grosjean, M.: Searching for weather in varves: use of ultra-high-resolution scanning techniques to reconstruct seasonal meteorological conditions, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16510, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16510, 2021.

EGU21-12748 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Lacustrine oxygen isotope records from biogenic silica (δ18OBSi) – a global compilation and review

Philip Meister and the Project team: "Lacustrine oxygen isotope records from biogenic silica (δ18OBSi) – a global compilation and review"

Isotope records are crucial for proxy-model comparison in paleoclimatology because of their advantage of being directly comparable with isotope-enabled paleoclimate model outputs. Oxygen isotopes (δ18O) are commonly measured on carbonates (i.e. ostracods, authigenic carbonates) and biogenic silica (mainly diatoms). Oxygen isotopes in lacustrine carbonates (δ18OCaCO3) have been studied extensively for several decades, yet they are subject to complex species-dependent fractionation processes and not available globally. Lacustrine oxygen isotope records from biogenic silica (δ18OBSi), on the other hand, likely do not display species-dependent fractionation effects (or only very minor) and offer insight even in data-sparse regions devoid of carbonates, such as the Arctic. To date, more than 70 lacustrine δ18OBSi records have been published. These case studies have been complemented with additional efforts addressing climatic and hydrological backgrounds, laboratory techniques and possible species-dependent fractionation as well as deposition and dissolution effects.

Here, we present the first comprehensive review and global compilation of lacustrine δ18OBSi records, with explicit regard to their individual lake basin parameters. With this work, we aim at contributing to bridging the gap between modelling and isotope geochemistry approaches regarding terrestrial archives in paleoclimatology. Departing from hitherto prevalent case studies, we assess what we can learn from lacustrine δ18OBSi records globally, considering lake basin characteristics, spatial and temporal coverage as well as hydrological background information. This improves both the usability of δ18OBSi for proxy-model comparison and our understanding of the general constraints for interpreting lacustrine δ18OBSi records.

How to cite: Meister, P. and the Project team: "Lacustrine oxygen isotope records from biogenic silica (δ18OBSi) – a global compilation and review": Lacustrine oxygen isotope records from biogenic silica (δ18OBSi) – a global compilation and review, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12748, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12748, 2021.

EGU21-1396 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Holocene lake water-aquifer interactions in La Ballestera Playa-lake (southern Spain) recorded by stable isotopes (δ18O and δD) of gypsum hydration water

Fernando Gazquez, Antonio García-Alix, Gonzalo Jiménez-Moreno, Francisco Jíménez-Espejo, and Miguel Rodríguez-Rodríguez

Oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes (δ18O and δD) of lake water are sensitive to long-term changes in environmental conditions, including relative humidity, temperature and the evaporation/outflow ratio of the lake. Lacustrine gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) forms in equilibrium with its parent fluid, so the isotopic composition of its structurally bonded hydration water (GHW) can reflect the δ18O and δD of lake water at the time of mineral formation, with insignificant effects of temperature and salinity on the water-GHW isotope fractionation factors. Using the stable isotope content of gypsum-rich sediment cores as a paleoclimatic proxy, the environmental conditions prevailing in the lake setting at the time of gypsum crystallization can be investigated.

Here we apply this method to reconstruct the δ18O and δD of paleo-water in La Ballestera Playa-lake (Seville, southern Spain) throughout the Holocene, from 11.2 cal kyr BP to the present. Gypsum crystallization took place punctually at 11.2 and 4.4 cal kyr BP, and did continuously from 2.9 cal kyr BP to the present. The δ18O and δD showed the lowest values at ~11.2 cal kyr BP (2.3‰ and -1.1‰, respectively) and were significantly higher at ~4.4 cal kyr BP (8.8‰ and 29.2‰, respectively). Likewise, relatively higher values (8.2‰ and 29.8‰, respectively) were recorded at ~2.9 cal kyr BP. Thereafter, the isotopic ratios increased until the present (11.4‰ and 37.1‰, respectively), suggesting increasing aridity and/or hydrological closeness of the lake. A relative minimum in δ18O and δD occurred at ~2.3 cal kyr BP, during the wetter stage of the Iberian Roman Humid Period, while a relative maximum at ~1.1 cal kyr BP was recorded during the Medieval Warm Period.

We use a steady-state Isotope Mass Balance to investigate the paleo-hydrological conditions in the lake setting at different stages of the Holocene. Our results suggest that at ~11.2 cal kyr BP La Ballestera Playa-lake was a flow-through lake closely connected to the aquifer with and evaporation/outflow ratio <0.5. At 4.4 cal kyr BP and from ~2.9 cal kyr BP until the present, the system behaved as a terminal lake (evaporation/outflow ratio close to 1), with less connection to the aquifer and the main water output occurred via evaporation. The studied system turned into a playa lake because of a regional water table lowering. This most likely resulted from increasing aridity in southern Iberia during the late Holocene, which has previously been suggested by other lake sediment records in this region. 

 

Acknowledgement

This study was supported by the Junta del Andalucía PY18-871 to FG, the project CGL2017-85415-R of the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad of Spain and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional FEDER, the project B-RNM-144-UGR18, Proyectos I+D+i del Programa Operativo FEDER 2018 and the research groups RNM-189 y RNM-190 (Junta de Andalucía). Dr. Antonio García-Alix acknowledges the Ramón y Cajal fellowship, RYC-2015-18966. Fernando Gázquez acknowledges the postdoctoral “HIPATIA” program of University of Almería.

How to cite: Gazquez, F., García-Alix, A., Jiménez-Moreno, G., Jíménez-Espejo, F., and Rodríguez-Rodríguez, M.: Holocene lake water-aquifer interactions in La Ballestera Playa-lake (southern Spain) recorded by stable isotopes (δ18O and δD) of gypsum hydration water, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1396, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1396, 2021.

EGU21-8245 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Stable isotope (carbon, hydrogen) variation in plants and lake surface sediments from northwestern Canada

Julie Lattaud, Negar Haghipour, Timothy Eglinton, and Lisa Broeder

Hydrogen isotope ratios of leaf waxes are used to reconstruct past hydroclimate because they are correlated to meteoric/growth water hydrogen isotopes. The interpretation of these signatures from ancient sedimentary archives relies on a thorough understanding of the drivers of modern isotope variability. Studies in the high latitudes, regions that are particularly valuable in light of their vulnerability to rapid climate change, are scarce. We studied modern vegetation (22 plants) in two areas in the Northwestern Territories (Canada): Herschel Island and Peel Plateau, to understand the stable isotope variability found in plants of Arctic regions. Bulk biomass stable carbon isotope and radiocarbon composition have been measured as well as fatty acids (wax lipids coating the plant leaves) stable carbon and hydrogen isotopes. Furthermore, lake surface sediments and river bank sediments from the Mackenzie River Delta (surrounded by the same plants) have been similarly studied. Bulk carbon isotope composition of the plants show strong difference between plant type, i.e. herbs, shrubs, lichen and moss, as shown in previous studies. Whereas the commonly used average chain length (ACL) is not useful to differentiate the plants. In term of compound-specific isotope ratios, herbs are generally 2H-enriched in comparison to shrubs as shown in other regions of the world, and the C28 fatty acid present the most differences amongst plant type (from ~ -207‰ for herbs to ~ – 240‰ for shrubs). No major difference between the areas is noted indicating that the ~ 250 km (Herschel Island 69.5⁰N and Peel Plateau 67.3⁰N) have no impact on the hydrogen isotope composition of the fatty acids. As such we decided to compare the plant with the lake surface sediments (from the Mackenzie Delta, located between Herschel Island and the Peel Plateau). Short-chain fatty acids, sourced from organisms growing in the lake, from isolated lakes shows 2H-enriched isotopic values indicating the effect of increased evaporation in the lake during summer plant growth. Whereas long-chain fatty acids do not show any differences and are enriched compared to the shorter-chain (~ -260‰ for long-chain vs ~ -260‰ to - 280‰ for short-chain). In conclusion, differences between plant fatty acids seems to be best represented by the C28 fatty acid, indicating the potential to reconstruct past vegetation and hydrological conditions in the region using lacustrine archives.

How to cite: Lattaud, J., Haghipour, N., Eglinton, T., and Broeder, L.: Stable isotope (carbon, hydrogen) variation in plants and lake surface sediments from northwestern Canada, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8245, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8245, 2021.

EGU21-4542 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Testing a thermometer of the past: abiotic and biotic drivers of the brGDGT-based temperature proxy along a subarctic elevation gradient.

Cindy De Jonge, Robin Halffman, Jonas Lembrechts, and Ivan Nijs

BrGDGTs are used in a variety of paleoclimate archives to reconstruct changes in temperature and pH. However, the temperature dependency, currently determined on a global scale, can be confounded on smaller spatial scales. To determine the unique effect of temperature on the brGDGT distribution in northern Scandinavia, 37 soils have been collected along a Swedish and Norwegian altitude gradient (14 to 1200 m asl). At this site, we measured in-situ soil temperature (1 year), as well as soil chemical parameters (pH, Ca, K, Mg, Mn, Fe, Mn, Al, total P, total N). Furthermore, we reconstructed the composition of the bacterial community in the same soils, using 16S rDNA, to allow direct comparison with the brGDGT lipid signatures.

Although we sampled over a limited range in pH values (3.3-5.4), large changes in brGDGT concentration are observed over the pH gradient. In low pH soils (>4.0), total brGDGT concentration (normalized per g soil) is increased, caused by an increase in the concentration of brGDGT Ia. This results in increased MBT’5ME values (0.53-0.7) in these soils. In high pH soils (pH>5.0) an increased concentration in 6-methyl brGDGTs is observed. These soils are characterized by a lower MBT’5ME values, driven by a decrease in the fractional abundance of brGDGT Ia. Along the altitudinal gradient, pH (and soil calcium) is the main driver of the MBT’5ME proxy (r= -0.60, p<0.01).

Along the Swedish and Norwegian altitudinal gradient, where a substantial change in temperature (-4.7 to 2.7 °C MAAT) was crossed, the MBT’5ME only shows a poor correlation with atmospheric MAAT values (r= 0.47, p<0.01). When comparing the MBT’5ME with in-situ measured soil temperatures (-2.5 to 4.3), that reflect the growth conditions of the soil bacteria better, the correlation is not improved (mean annual soil temperature: r= 0.32, p=0.05). A correlation with seasonal temperatures (Growing Degree Days [GDD]) results in a better dependency between the MBT’5ME and soil temperature (r= 0.44, p<0.01), which can reflect that brGDGT are generally produced in non-frozen soil conditions.

However, at the Swedish and Norwegian altitudinal gradient, there is a significant correlation observed between the temperature (GDD) and soil chemical parameters. In general, soil pH is increased at lower temperatures (r=-0.32, p=0.04, n=37). Considering all soil chemical parameters, the total concentration of K decreases closely with an increase in soil temperature (GDD: r= -0.63, p<0.01, n=37). The mechanism behind this is probably an interplay between local geology, and a temperature dependent extent of chemical and biological weathering. Because of this correlation, it is not clear whether MBT’5ME varies exclusively in response to soil chemistry, with an indirect response to temperature changes.

Although the environmental driver determining the brGDGT signal can not be determined unequivocally, the bacterial community composition is clearly determined by soil pH. In those high pH soils (pH> 4.9) where increased concentrations of 6-methyl brGDGTs are produced, several Acidobacterial OTUs (specifically Acidobacteria subgroup 6) are increased. This indicates that the mechanism behind the changed fractional abundances is a pH-modulated bacterial community shift.

How to cite: De Jonge, C., Halffman, R., Lembrechts, J., and Nijs, I.: Testing a thermometer of the past: abiotic and biotic drivers of the brGDGT-based temperature proxy along a subarctic elevation gradient., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4542, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4542, 2021.

EGU21-8362 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Revised brGDGT fractional abundances and warm-season temperatures strengthen relationships between brGDGTs and environmental variables

Jonathan H. Raberg, Aria Blumm, David J. Harning, Sarah E. Crump, Greg de Wet, Nadia Dildar, Sebastian Kopf, Áslaug Geirsdóttir, Gifford H. Miller, and Julio Sepúlveda

Branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) are an important tool for reconstructing terrestrial paleotemperatures from lake sediments. In addition to temperature, however, the distribution of these bacterial membrane lipids is influenced by other environmental variables such as pH, conductivity, and dissolved oxygen. Furthermore, though most brGDGT calibrations are performed against mean annual air temperature (MAT), there is considerable evidence that their distributions are more closely tied to warm-season conditions. Here, we present a new method for analyzing brGDGT data that deconvolves the influences of temperature, conductivity, and pH. Additionally, we measure brGDGT distributions in surface sediments from 43 high-latitude lakes with low MAT and high seasonality. In combination with a globally compiled lake sediment dataset, these samples show a clear warm-season bias in brGDGT-derived temperatures. They also show lake water conductivity to be the second-most important variable in controlling brGDGT distributions. We use the compiled dataset and new fractional abundances to generate brGDGT calibrations for warm-season air temperatures and lake water conductivity and pH for use in lake sediments globally.

How to cite: Raberg, J. H., Blumm, A., Harning, D. J., Crump, S. E., de Wet, G., Dildar, N., Kopf, S., Geirsdóttir, Á., Miller, G. H., and Sepúlveda, J.: Revised brGDGT fractional abundances and warm-season temperatures strengthen relationships between brGDGTs and environmental variables, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8362, 2021.

EGU21-15206 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Holocene vegetation, climate and human impact in steppes around Lake Sevan (Armenia) based on a multiproxy approach: Pollen, NPPs and brGDGTs

Mary Robles, Odile Peyron, Elisabetta Brugiapaglia, Guillemette Ménot, Lucas Dugerdil, Vincent Ollivier, Anne-Lise Develle, Petros Tozalakyan, Khachatur Meliksetian, Kristina Sahakyan, Lilit Sahakyan, Bérengère Perello, Ruben Badalyan, Claude Colombié, and Joannin Sébastien

In the Caucasus Mountains, the role of human influences and climate changes on steppes expansion over the Holocene is still discussed because this region is poorly documented. This study investigates (1) modern pollen-vegetation relationships in Armenia and (2) changes in vegetation, human activity and climate in the Holocene record of Vanevan peat (south-eastern shore of Lake Sevan) located in Armenia. The last 9700 years are recorded in the Vanevan core. We used a multiproxy approach including XRF, Pollen, Non-Pollen Palynomorphs (NPPs) and branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (brGDGTs) to reconstruct changes in vegetation, human impact and climate. The combination of these proxies is innovative and aims to distinguish the impact of human activities and climate change on vegetation. Modern pollen assemblages from semi-desert/steppe regions of Armenia show an abundance of Chenopodiaceae while meadows steppes, subalpine and alpine meadows are dominated by Poaceae. The Holocene vegetation at Vanevan is characterized by steppes dominated by Poaceae, Artemisia and Chenopodiaceae. However, several arboreal taxa, such as Quercus, Betula, Carpinus betulus and Ulmus, are more developed on slopes between 8600 and 5100 cal BP. Regarding the human impact, the presence of agriculture is attested since 5200 cal BP, largely increases during the last 2000 years cal BP (high percentages of Cerealia-type pollen) and correlates with the occupation periods reported in archeological studies. Palaeoclimate changes at Vanevan are estimated from (1) water level changes (2) temperature reconstructions based on brGDGTs (3) climate reconstructions based on pollen (through a multi-method approach: Modern Analogue Technique, Weighted Averaging Partial Least Squares regression, Random Forest, and Boosted Regression Trees). Climate reconstructions based on pollen and brGDGTs are rare and the multi-method approach using pollen data is innovative in the region. The results of Vanevan give evidence of high temperatures from 7900 to 5100 cal BP and arid events at 6000, 5000-4500 and 4200 cal BP, in agreement with other regional records.

How to cite: Robles, M., Peyron, O., Brugiapaglia, E., Ménot, G., Dugerdil, L., Ollivier, V., Develle, A.-L., Tozalakyan, P., Meliksetian, K., Sahakyan, K., Sahakyan, L., Perello, B., Badalyan, R., Colombié, C., and Sébastien, J.: Holocene vegetation, climate and human impact in steppes around Lake Sevan (Armenia) based on a multiproxy approach: Pollen, NPPs and brGDGTs, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15206, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15206, 2021.

UV-B radiation may affect atmospheric circulation and influence climate, as well as affecting all biological life on Earth. However, past environmental and climate reconstructions (using various multi-proxy approaches) generally do not focus on UV-B. Ultraviolet-Absorbing Compounds (UACs) in pollen grains are an indicator of the UV-B level received by plants, and it is possible to measure the abundance of UACs in pollen using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) micro-Spectroscopy, providing a promising approach to UV-B reconstruction. This research reconstructed UAC levels in individual Cedrus atlantica (Atlas cedar) pollen grains within sediment samples from a 20 m core at Lake Sidi Ali, Middle Atlas, Morocco, spanning the Holocene. Correlations between UACs and other palaeoenvironmental proxies from the same core are discussed, including, oxygen stable isotopes (18O) which reflect winter rainfall, local dust sedimentation, and lake sediment CaCO3 and Total Organic Carbon (TOC), as well as independent 10Be-derived Total Solar Irradiance (TSI). Correlations between these proxies may indicate solar-related temperature and humidity fluctuations at Lake Sidi Ali, considering mechanisms of varied ocean and terrestrial circulation under different levels of solar activity, although there is some chronological uncertanty due to different sampling resolutions. A positive correlation between UAC levels and winter rainfall at Morocco implies connections between oceanic circulation and solar activity, while the relationship with local dust sedimentation reveals how solar irradiation may influence the Saharan dry air mass contribution to Morocco. Analysis of single pollen grains using FTIR presents several challenges in obtaining clean spectra, which can be a source of uncertainty with this approach. To minimise noise in FTIR spectra, Cedrus pollen grains should be measured using the same orientation under microscope. As this is not always posssible, we developed a protocol to evaluate spectra quality to filter out spectra that had excessive noise, or were deemed not to be a pollen grain. We also assess the minimum effective number of pollen grains that require measurement to provide a statisitcally significant sample and thereby improve the quality of UAC data. Our protocol represents good practice in developing a robust UAC data set, which can allow for UV-B and solar radiation levels to be inferred. Future work aims to quantitatively reconstruct UV-B levels using a modern UAC calibration.

 

How to cite: Wang, T., Bell, B., Fletcher, W., Wogelius, R., and Zielhofer, C.: Quantifying past changes in Holocene ultraviolet-absorbing compounds (UACs) from Cedrus pollen in Lake Sidi Ali, Morocco, Africa based on fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10727, 2021.

EGU21-6518 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Vegetation dynamics of the eastern Mediterranean region during the Holocene

Esmeralda Cruz-Silva, Sandy P. Harrison, Elena Marinova, and I. Colin Prentice

The circum-Mediterranean region is characterized by high climatic diversity derived from its orographic heterogeneity and the influence of global marine and atmospheric circulation patterns. The region also has a long and dynamic history of human occupation dating back to ~ 8000 years BP.  The complexity of this area is a challenge for reconstructing the dynamics of the vegetation through the Holocene. Rule-based approaches to reconstructing changing vegetation patterns through time are insufficient as they require the imposition of subjective boundaries between biomes and can be affected by known biases in pollen representation.  We have developed and tested a new method that characterises biomes as a function of observed pollen assemblages based on a similarity index, conceptually related to the likelihood function, which takes account of within-biome variability in taxon abundances. We use 1181 modern pollen samples from the EMBSeCBIO database and assign these samples to biomes as represented in a map of potential natural vegetation that was developed using machine learning. The method was applied down-core to reconstruct past vegetation changes. Preliminary results show that this new methodology produces more accurate biome assignments under modern conditions (<80% accuracy) and more stable down-core reconstructions, apparently reducing the "flickering switch" problem found when using the traditional biomisation method for this purpose. Climate-induced vegetation changes are observable on a sub-regional scale in the Eastern Mediterranean through the Holocene. Most of the records show a change from humid to more arid biomes between 4000 and 3000 years BP. However, they are distinct subregional patterns in the expression and timing of wetter conditions during the Holocene. Mountain regions appear to show more muted changes during the Holocene, although there are biome shifts everywhere across the Pleistocene-Holocene transition.

How to cite: Cruz-Silva, E., Harrison, S. P., Marinova, E., and Prentice, I. C.: Vegetation dynamics of the eastern Mediterranean region during the Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6518, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6518, 2021.

EGU21-12546 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Modern pollen-vegetation-climate relationships and pollen productivity estimates for common East Siberian taxa

Rongwei Geng, Andrei Andreev, Stefan Kruse, Yan Zhao, Ulrike Herzschuh, Luidmila Pestraykova, and Evgenii Zakharov

East Siberia is an ideal area for investigating the relationships between modern pollen assemblages and vegetation under the extremely cold and dry climate conditions. These relationships are the basis of paleovegetation and paleoclimate reconstructions from fossil pollen records. Pollen productivity estimates (PPE) are required for reliable pollen-based quantitative vegetation reconstructions. Here, we present a new pollen dataset of 48 moss/soil and 24 lake surface sediment samples collected from Chukotka and Yakutia. Generally, tundra and taiga vegetation sites can be well distinguished in the surface pollen assemblages from East Siberia. Moss/soil and lake samples have mostly similar pollen assemblages but contents of some pollen taxa may vary significantly in different sample types. We classified drone images based on field survey to obtain high-resolute vegetation data. Pollen counts in moss/soil samples and vegetation data can? be used in the Extended R-Value (ERV) model to estimate the relevant source area of pollen (RSAP) and the PPEs of major plant taxa. The result of PPE calculation for most common taxa (Alnus, Betula, Cyperaceae, Ericaceae, Larix, Pinus and Salix) can be used to improve vegetation reconstructions.

How to cite: Geng, R., Andreev, A., Kruse, S., Zhao, Y., Herzschuh, U., Pestraykova, L., and Zakharov, E.: Modern pollen-vegetation-climate relationships and pollen productivity estimates for common East Siberian taxa, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12546, 2021.

EGU21-3848 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Reconstructing Holocene vegetation-fire regimes in the Iberian Peninsula

Yicheng Shen, Sandy Harrison, and Colin Prentice

Analyses of the regional controls representing climate, vegetation and human activities on modern burnt area in the Iberian Peninsula show that the vegetation properties that determine fuel availability are major influences on the occurrence of fire. This finding opens up the possibility of using pollen data to reconstruct past changes in fire regimes. We could then make use of the much greater abundance of pollen data compared to other sources of information on past fire regimes to constrain biomass-burning feedbacks to the carbon cycle and climate. We applied Tolerance-Weighted Averaging Partial Least-Squares (TWA-PLS) to derive quantitative relationships between pollen-taxon and charcoal abundances from 15 entities from the Iberian Peninsula, using core-top charcoal data and a generalized linear model of present-day fire probability to provide conversion factors between the relative scale of charcoal abundance and the absolute scale of fire. We show that pollen taxon abundance has good predictive power for fire (r2 = 0.56) and that the contribution of specific taxa to the prediction makes sense in terms of their ecological adaptations to fire. We apply the TWA-PLS quantitative relationship to predict changing fire regimes across the Iberian Peninsula through the Holocene. Results show that fire change synchronous with climate warming events.

How to cite: Shen, Y., Harrison, S., and Prentice, C.: Reconstructing Holocene vegetation-fire regimes in the Iberian Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3848, 2021.

EGU21-8974 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

The potential and limitations of long-term fire regime reconstructions in Eastern Siberia based on sedimentary charcoal and low-temperature fire markers 

Elisabeth Dietze, Kai Mangelsdorf, Jasmin Weise, Heidrun Matthes, Simeon Lisovski, and Ulrike Herzschuh

Forest fires are an important factor in the global carbon cycle and high latitude ecosystems. Eastern Siberian tundra, summergreen larch-dominated boreal forest on permafrost and evergreen boreal forest have characteristic fire regimes with varying fire intensities. Yet, it is unknown which role fire plays in long-term climate-vegetation-permafrost feedbacks and how high-latitude fire regimes and ecosystems will change in a warmer world. To learn from fire regime shifts during previous interglacials, prior to human presence, we use lake-sedimentary charcoal as proxy for high-intensity forest fires and monosaccharide anhydrides (i.e. levoglucosan, mannosan, galactosan: MA) as molecular proxies for low-temperature biomass burning, typical for surface fires in modern larch forest. However, MA pathways from source to sink and their stability in sediments are very poorly constrained. Recently, Dietze et al. (2020) found MA in up to 420 kyr old sediment of Lake El’gygytgyn (ICDP Site 5011-1), NE Siberia, suggesting that they are suitable proxies for fires in summergreen boreal forests. Surprisingly, the ratios of the MA isomers were exceptionally low compared to published emission ratios from modern combustions.

To understand what MA from Arctic lake sediments tell us, we have analyzed the MA and charcoal composition in modern lake surface sediments of Lake El’gygytgyn and three East Siberian lakes and we compare them to late glacial-to-interglacial El’gygytgyn records. The three Siberian lakes were chosen to represent spatial analogues to the El’gygytgyn conditions during MIS 5e and 11c. We discuss first results of the modern sediments in context of recent MODIS- and Landsat-based fire extents and biome-specific land cover data, a wind field modelling using climate data over eastern Siberia, and lake-catchment configurations from TDX-DEM analysis to assess potential fire proxy source areas and regional-to-local transport processes. Thereby, we provide insights into the meaning of sedimentary fire proxies, crucial for a sound reconstruction of long-term fire regime histories.

How to cite: Dietze, E., Mangelsdorf, K., Weise, J., Matthes, H., Lisovski, S., and Herzschuh, U.: The potential and limitations of long-term fire regime reconstructions in Eastern Siberia based on sedimentary charcoal and low-temperature fire markers , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8974, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8974, 2021.

EGU21-11080 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

The potential use of sedimentary pyrogenic biomarkers to quantitatively reconstruct wildfires occurrence and extension

Maria Raja, Pedro Rivas, Gorka Muñoa, Carles Moreu, Nuria Penalva, Nina Davtian, Joan Villanueva, and Antoni Rosell-Melé

We have developed and applied new analytical methodologies to study the drivers of the spatial distribution of pyrogenic biomarkers throughout the Iberian Peninsula. The goal of the study is to develop a multiproxy pyrogenic biomarker approach to quantitatively reconstruct the paleo-occurrence and extension of biomass wildfires from sediments. For this purpose, we have compiled an extensive collection of lacustrine sediments throughout Spain. The sample suite is representative of a wide range of climates and ecosystems. We have quantified the abundance of different types of pyrogenic biomarkers such as BPCAs (benzene polycarboxylic acids derived from the chemical oxydation of pyrogenic carbon), MAS (monosaccharide anhydrides, namely levoglucosan) and PAHs (polyaromatic hydrocarbons namely with 4 or more rings). The data obtained, as concentrations or ratios, has been mapped and compared to the documented occurrence and extension of wildfires in Spain over the last 5 decades. Specifically, we have calculated the burned area within different radius around the lake, and correlated them against the biomarker data. 

The regional distribution of fires in Spain is the primary driver of the spatial distribution of pyrogenic biomarkers in lakes sediments. Thus, the sedimentary concentration of pyrogenic biomarkers, generally, correlates with the area of burned forest land within a radius of 10-20km. Work is still under way to decipher the meaning between the correlations of different types of pyrogenic biomarkers, and the relation between biomarker ratios and fire regimes and vegetation types. Our study shows that pyrogenic biomarkers in lakes can be used as paleoproxies to study regional fires, as opposed to those occurring at larger spatial scales. It remains to be seen, how our findings  from Spanish lakes can be extrapolated  to other continental regions.  Nonetheless, our study validates their use to quantify the area of forest burned in the region surrounding the lake, in addition to the frequency of fires in the past.

How to cite: Raja, M., Rivas, P., Muñoa, G., Moreu, C., Penalva, N., Davtian, N., Villanueva, J., and Rosell-Melé, A.: The potential use of sedimentary pyrogenic biomarkers to quantitatively reconstruct wildfires occurrence and extension, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11080, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11080, 2021.

EGU21-10060 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.1

Relationships between meteorological data and soil properties: quantifying precipitation and aridity in the Middle Danube Basin through geophysical proxies

Christian Zeeden, Mathias Vinnepand, Kamila Ryzner, Christian Rolf, Christian Laag, Mehrdad Sardar Abadi, Milica G. Radaković, Milivoj B. Gavrilov, and Slobodan B. Marković

Spatial patterns of precipitation and aridity across Europe are most likely to vary in response to changing temperature. Our knowledge about such responses is, however, still limited as most geoscientific studies provide point data rather than cover wider areas. Such an approach would require reliable proxies, which can be determined in high spatial resolution along with detailed knowledge about how these reflect climate. Classically, we derive (paleo-) precipitation and -temperature for terrestrial areas from climofunctions, which base on magnetic susceptibility (χ) and its frequency dependence (χfd). These parameters reflect the quantity and modification state of magnetic minerals like magnetite, which are dependent on the combined influence of temperature and precipitation. Recently, also the maghemite contribution to the high-temperature dependent susceptibility (χtd) has been used to create climofunctions, which are mainly constrained to reconstruction of (palaeo-) precipitation. Yet, such relationships have mostly been reported from Asia.

In this study, we test if we can qualify and quantify (palaeo-) precipitation, temperature and aridity by room- and high-temperature rock magnetic and colorimetric data of recent topsoils in a narrow precipitation range between ~535 mm/a and 585 mm/a. The data are derived from geographically evenly distributed bulk-samples from the Backa Loess Plateau (Middle Danube Basin). Our results show that we can quantify precipitation by rock magnetic properties (χ, χfd, as well as χtd), but colorimetric methods are more challenging to interpret. While we can also reconstruct aridity, temperature is difficult to determine in a meaningful way.

In this contribution, we show the results of statistical analysis performed on a multivariate rock magnetic and colorimetric dataset, and their relation to geographical differences in prevailing climatic regimes of the Middle Danube Basin. While care needs to be taken not to overfit the data (due to more colorimetric variables than spatial data points), we regard our multivariate approach at least as relevant as trying to fit individual magnetic or colorimetric proxies to climate variables.

How to cite: Zeeden, C., Vinnepand, M., Ryzner, K., Rolf, C., Laag, C., Sardar Abadi, M., Radaković, M. G., Gavrilov, M. B., and Marković, S. B.: Relationships between meteorological data and soil properties: quantifying precipitation and aridity in the Middle Danube Basin through geophysical proxies, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10060, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10060, 2021.

CL5.1.3 – Radiocarbon as an environmental tracer – novel techniques and applications

EGU21-627 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Mineral protection regulates the long-term global preservation of natural organic carbon

Jordon Hemingway, Daniel Rothman, Katherine Grant, Sarah Rosengard, Timothy Eglinton, Louis Derry, and Valier Galy

The vast majority of organic carbon (OC) produced by life is respired back to carbon dioxide (CO2), but roughly 0.1% escapes and is preserved over geologic timescales. By sequestering reduced carbon from Earth’s surface, this “slow OC leak” contributes to CO2 removal and promotes the accumulation of atmospheric oxygen and oxidized minerals. Countering this, OC contained within sedimentary rocks is oxidized during exhumation and erosion of mountain ranges. By respiring previously sequestered reduced carbon, erosion consumes atmospheric oxygen and produces CO2. The balance between these two processes—preservation and respiration—regulates atmospheric composition, Earth-surface redox state, and global climate. Despite this importance, the governing mechanisms remain poorly constrained. To provide new insight, we developed a method that investigates OC composition using bond-strength distributions coupled with radiocarbon ages. Here I highlight a suite of recent results using this approach, and I show that biospheric OC interacts with particles and becomes physiochemically protected during aging, thus promoting preservation. I will discuss how this mechanistic framework can help elucidate why OC preservation—and thus atmospheric composition, Earth-surface redox state, and climate—has varied throughout Earth history.

How to cite: Hemingway, J., Rothman, D., Grant, K., Rosengard, S., Eglinton, T., Derry, L., and Galy, V.: Mineral protection regulates the long-term global preservation of natural organic carbon, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-627, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-627, 2021.

EGU21-915 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Determining and improving the analytical blank for radiocarbon analyses of small foraminifera samples using MICADAS and the gas interface system

Gesine Mollenhauer, Hendrik Grotheer, Elizabeth Bonk, and Torben Gentz

Foraminifera isolated from deep-sea sediments are among the most common materials in AMS radiocarbon analysis. These results are used to determine accurate age models for sediment sequences as well as to detect changes in deep-sea ventilation. Often, only small numbers of (monospecific) foraminifera shells can be isolated, in particular when studying benthic species in sediments from the polar regions. Therefore, these samples are often analyzed as CO2 gas using MICADAS instruments, and the method can typically be used for samples of up to around 40 ka in age. For reliable results, an accurate determination and minimization of processing blanks is required.

Processing blanks for foraminifera samples may in part derive from acid hydrolysis of the carbonates. It has, however, been shown that contamination of the carbonate fossils, mainly from atmospheric CO2 adsorbed on the porous surfaces of foraminifera, is the largest source of blank found in foraminifera samples. The removal of such contamination has been attempted by various leaching methods, which come at the risk of introducing additional contaminations. Alternatively, blank correction of AMS results may be achieved using fossil foraminifera from ancient deposits much beyond the range of the radiocarbon method.

Here we report results of a systematic test comparing the F14C levels obtained for fossil (>130 ka) and sub-modern monospecific planktic and benthic foraminifera samples using different blank correction approaches. Specifically, we compare leaching with dilute hydrochloric acid, blank correction relative to a leached and an un-leached fossil foraminifera standard, and blank correction relative to the IAEA-C1 certified carbonate standard. 

How to cite: Mollenhauer, G., Grotheer, H., Bonk, E., and Gentz, T.: Determining and improving the analytical blank for radiocarbon analyses of small foraminifera samples using MICADAS and the gas interface system, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-915, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-915, 2021.

EGU21-3118 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

A multi-resolution ocean simulation of the anthropogenic radiocarbon transient

Martin Butzin, Dmitry Sidorenko, and Peter Köhler

We have implemented 14C and further abiotic tracers (39Ar, CFC-12, and SF6) into the state-of-the-art ocean circulation model FESOM2. Different to other global ocean circulation models, FESOM2 employs unstructured meshes with variable horizontal resolution. This approach allows for improvements in areas which are commonly poorly resolved in global ocean modelling studies such as upwelling regions, while keeping the overall computational costs still sufficiently moderate. Here, we present results of a transient simulation running from 1850-2015 CE tracing the evolution of the bomb radiocarbon pulse with a focus on the evolution of marine radiocarbon ages. In addition we explore the potential of 39Argon to complement 14C dating of marine waters.

How to cite: Butzin, M., Sidorenko, D., and Köhler, P.: A multi-resolution ocean simulation of the anthropogenic radiocarbon transient, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3118, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3118, 2021.

EGU21-6700 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

A smaller glacial ocean carbon inventory?

Jun Shao, Lowell Stott, Andy Ridgwell, Ning Zhao, Florian Adolphi, and Jimin Yu

Previous studies attempting to explain Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 variations have focused on mechanisms that transfer carbon (C) between the oceanic, atmospheric and terrestrial reservoirs, with the underlying assumption that the total C inventory in these three Earth’s surface reservoirs remained constant during glacial-interglacial cycles. Under this framework, ocean C inventory would have been marginally increased by 500-1000 GtC (1-2%) during the glacial period. Here, we show that past ocean C inventory can be revealed by reconstructed bulk ocean 14C/12C (denoted as ∆14C) and atmospheric 14C production rates with an Earth system model - cGENIE. First, we develop a bulk ocean ∆14C record that spans the last 40 ka from thousands of benthic foraminifera and deep sea coral ∆14C data with a fairly good coverage of the global seafloor. We then run cGENIE under constant pre-industrial boundary conditions, with the only forcing being atmospheric 14C production rates reconstructed by geomagnetic field intensity records and ice core record of 10Be fluxes. Under most of the 14C production scenarios, the simulated bulk ocean ∆14C are significantly lower than our composite during the Last Glacial Maximum as well as the early deglaciation. Bulk ocean ∆14C is a metric controlled by 14C production rates and ocean C inventory, with the state of ocean circulation playing a minor role.  Our finding suggests either glacial 14C production was much higher and/or glacial C inventory was much lower than previously thought. Implications of both possibilities are discussed. In particular, the second possibility highlight the exchange of C and ALK between Earth’s surface and geological reservoirs as a critical missing piece in searching for a complete theory of glacial-interglacial atmospheric CO2 variability.

How to cite: Shao, J., Stott, L., Ridgwell, A., Zhao, N., Adolphi, F., and Yu, J.: A smaller glacial ocean carbon inventory?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6700, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6700, 2021.

Due to nuclear bomb tests during mid 1950s and 1960s, enormous amount of bomb radiocarbon was introduced into the atmosphere and subsequently to the ocean. Corals growing in shallow oceanic region record the radiocarbon variations in ocean surface waters. The bomb radiocarbon signature embedded in coral can be useful in providing information about natural processes affecting the surface waters of the region. In this regard, coral based radiocarbon records from the Lakshadweep Islands and the Andaman Islands from the northern Indian Ocean has been analysed. The analysed coral ∆14C values of recent period show comparable or even higher than the atmospheric ∆14C values, suggesting that major fraction of bomb radiocarbon have transferred in to the ocean. The northern Andaman region show ∆14C decline rate of about 3.1 ‰ yr-1 between 1978 to 2014. Whereas, the southern Bay of Bengal and the Lakshadweep records show relatively lower decline rate of 2.5 ‰ yr-1 for the same period. Based on the coral and atmospheric radiocarbon values, air-sea CO2 exchange rate over the Lakshadweep and Andaman region has been estimated. The bomb radiocarbon based estimate of air-sea CO2 exchange rate over Lakshadweep is 13.4 ± 2.1 mol m-2 yr-1 and over northern Andaman is 8.8 ± 1.3 mol m-2 yr-1. The Lakshadweep region show net regional CO2 flux of 2.5 ± 0.4 Tg C yr-1, while the northern Andaman region shows value of -0.3 ± 0.04 Tg C yr-1. This study discusses the spatial and temporal radiocarbon changes in the northern Indian Ocean and has implications to constraining the carbon flux over the region.

How to cite: Raj, H. and Bhushan, R.: Surface radiocarbon record from the northern Indian Ocean: understanding surface ocean processes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15892, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15892, 2021.

EGU21-9643 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Ocean radiocarbon response to circulation changes

Byju Pookkandy and Heather Graven

This study investigates the impact of circulation changes on the distribution of radiocarbon in the ocean interior using simulations of the NEMO model forced by JRA-55 atmospheric reanalysis data. We performed four simulations from 1850 to 2017 with transient or fixed boundary conditions for atmospheric ∆14C and CO2, forced with inter-annually varying or fixed neutral year JRA-55 reanalysis data. The difference between variable and steady-state ocean dynamics revealed the areas in the world ocean where the radiocarbon distribution is most affected by variable ocean circulation: the midlatitude North Pacific and North Atlantic, the midlatitude South Pacific and South Indian, and the Weddell Sea. The difference between fixed and transient atmospheric boundary conditions over the past few decades shows the impact on natural vs bomb 14C. We investigate the potential drivers of variability from gas exchange, mixing in the thermocline, and interior transport. In general, the impact of circulation changes on bomb and natural 14C shows similar patterns but the effect is larger for bomb 14C. Compared to observed decadal changes in ∆14C between the 1990s and 2010s, the model underestimates the changes in ∆14C and potential density suggesting that the model response to circulation change is rapid.

How to cite: Pookkandy, B. and Graven, H.: Ocean radiocarbon response to circulation changes, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9643, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9643, 2021.

EGU21-12319 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Carbon sources and sequestration: 14C Ramped Pyroxidation in aquatic sediments.

Evelyn Keaveney, Gerard Barrett, Paula Reimer, and Maarten Blaauw

Sequestration of organic carbon in aquatic sediments can depend on its source and potential lability. Studies have shown that bulk lake and marine sediment comprises carbon of different origin but its source has been difficult to attribute. A new Ramped Pyroxidation/Combustion (RPO) system in the 14CHRONO Centre has been established. RPO is a technique that incrementally heats a sample, and allows for collection of the CO2 produced for radiocarbon analyses. The results show its utility in partitioning carbon sources in lake sediment (Rostherne Mere, UK, Santa María del Orolake, Mexico), and arctic marine sediment (Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Shelf). RPO and 2-stepped combustion1. 14C indicated multiple carbon sources in Rostherne Mere sediment, some of which could be attributed to the construction of a sewage treatment works (STW) on the lake shore, and subsequently inputs from this STW. RPO identified 3 carbon fractions in Mexican Lake sediment, which provided a more accurate chronology, partitioning the contemporaneous sediment date from offsets induced from volcanic activity in the area. Results from Arctic marine sediment demonstrated inputs of carbon from ancient permafrost, providing a means to refine the chronologies and a basis for future research linked with carbon loss from thawing permafrost.

1Keaveney et al. 2020. Journal of Palaeolimnology 64 347-363

How to cite: Keaveney, E., Barrett, G., Reimer, P., and Blaauw, M.: Carbon sources and sequestration: 14C Ramped Pyroxidation in aquatic sediments., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12319, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12319, 2021.

EGU21-15449 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

High-resolution radiocarbon dating to reconstruct last century environmental changes in the pacific island of Espiritu Santo

Giorgia Camperio, Caroline Welte, S. Nemiah Ladd, Matthew Prebble, and Nathalie Dubois

Espiritu Santo is one of the 82 islands of the archipelago of Vanuatu and is the largest, highest, and most biodiverse of the insular country. Climatic changes linked to El Niño and extreme events such as cyclones and volcanic eruptions are a daily challenge in this remote area. These events can be recorded in sedimentary archives. Here we present a multi-proxy investigation of sediment cores retrieved from two small lakes located on the West coast of Espiritu Santo. Although the records span the last millennium, high-resolution radiocarbon dating of macrofossils reveals a rapid accumulation of sediment in the past 100 years. The high accumulation rate coupled with the high-resolution dating of freshwater sediments allows us to compare the 14C bomb curve with the biogeochemical proxies of the sedimentary records. The results can then be validated against written and oral historical records linked with the societal perception of recent environmental changes in this vulnerable ecosystem.

How to cite: Camperio, G., Welte, C., Ladd, S. N., Prebble, M., and Dubois, N.: High-resolution radiocarbon dating to reconstruct last century environmental changes in the pacific island of Espiritu Santo, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15449, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15449, 2021.

EGU21-9257 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Investigation of reservoir age variations in Lake Druksiai caused by anthropogenic factors

Laurynas Butkus, Rūta Barisevičiūtė, Justina Šapolaitė, Žilvinas Ežerinskis, Evaldas Maceika, Algirdas Pabedinskas, Andrius Garbaras, and Vidmantas Remeikis

The reservoir effect (RE) is defined as the difference between the radiocarbon isotope ratio (14C/12C) in the terrestrial and aquatic samples. Both natural processes and anthropogenic activities affecting carbon cycle in the water ecosystem can lead to changes in the RE. Therefore, reservoir effect studies can help to assess the impact of external factors on a hydrological system [1].

The aim of this research was to evaluate the impact of anthropogenic 14C contamination from Ignalina nuclear power plant (Ignalina NPP, INPP) on the Lake Drūkšiai system. The lake water was used to cool the reactors of the INPP. The lake sediment and fish (both benthic and pelagic) scale samples were collected from the Drūkšiai lake. ABA (acid-base-acid) chemical pretreatment procedure was used to extract humin (HM) and humic acid (HA) fractions from the sediments. Radiocarbon measurements in these samples were performed using the accelerator mass spectrometer (AMS).

In 1963, increased concentrations of radiocarbon due to the testing of nuclear weapons showed that atmosphere-lake CO2 exchange accounted for about 22% carbon in bottom sediments. During the first 15 years of operation of the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant, 14C-enriched dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was continuously released into Lake Druksiai. During that period, an average of about 0.24 GBq of radiocarbon was released per year. Measurements of radiocarbon concentrations in fish confirm that the 14C contamination was in dissolved inorganic form.

Around 2000, 14C-enriched DIC (2.3 GBq radiocarbon) was released into Lake Druksiai from Ignalina NPP. In addition, organic compounds were additionally released in the same year. These compounds were not 14C-enriched but affected the interaction between humic and humic acids. Almost a decade after the end of operation of the Ignalina NPP, there is still some 14C pollution (from INPP) remaining in Lake Druksiai. The concentration of radiocarbon in the bottom sediments is still higher than in the atmosphere. 

 

[1] R. Barisevičiūtė et al., Tracing Carbon Isotope Variations in Lake Sediments Caused by Environmental Factors During the Past Century: A Case Study of Lake Tapeliai, Lithuania, Radiocarbon 61(4), 885–903, (2019).

How to cite: Butkus, L., Barisevičiūtė, R., Šapolaitė, J., Ežerinskis, Ž., Maceika, E., Pabedinskas, A., Garbaras, A., and Remeikis, V.: Investigation of reservoir age variations in Lake Druksiai caused by anthropogenic factors, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9257, 2021.

EGU21-14942 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Soil Carbon Dynamics and Atmospheric Signals in Stalagmite Radiocarbon at Sofular Cave, Turkey

Steffen Therre, Jens Fohlmeister, Dominik Fleitmann, Ronny Friedrich, Andrea Schröder-Ritzrau, Marleen Lausecker, and Norbert Frank

The climatic controls of stalagmite radiocarbon remain one focus of modern paleoclimatology due to recent efforts and achievements in radiocarbon calibration. The Hulu cave radiocarbon record (Cheng et al., 2018) has proven the potential of stalagmites from temperate climate zones for atmospheric radiocarbon reconstruction. However, a constant dead carbon fraction (DCF) in stalagmites over long periods of time is rather exceptional. In our study, a high-resolution radiocarbon record (N>100) of a U-Series dated stalagmite from Sofular Cave, Northern Turkey, with elemental Mg/Ca ratio data is presented. From 14 to 10 kyr BP, the radiocarbon signal reveals changing climatic conditions throughout Termination I with warm periods affiliated with increased soil activity and lower DCF. We observe unstable soil conditions for the period before 14 kyr BP where DCF is strongly variable between a lower threshold of ca. 5% and an upper limit of 25%. The combination of stable isotopes, element ratios, radiocarbon and U-series data allows a multi-proxy analysis of the impact of fast climate changes like D/O events on the incorporation of radiocarbon into stalagmites. Between 15 and 27 kyr BP, hydrological changes and soil carbon cycling have a large impact on limestone dissolution systematics which is reflected in fast changing DCF on sub-centennial time scales. Although the reconstruction of atmospheric radiocarbon variability is not possible for the entire growth period, the stalagmite closely reproduces the increased atmospheric radiocarbon concentration at ca. 40 kyr BP during the Laschamp geomagnetic reversal, which has been implemented into radiocarbon calibration curves with the publication of IntCal20 (Reimer et al. 2020). Our record provides new insights in the climatic influence on stalagmite radiocarbon and as to how precision and accuracy of calibration can benefit from comprehensive multi-proxy stalagmite records.

References

Cheng, H., Lawrence Edwards, R., Southon, J., et al.: Atmospheric 14C/12C changes during the last glacial period from Hulu cave, Science, 362(6420), 1293–1297, doi:10.1126/science.aau0747, 2018.

Reimer, P. J., Austin, W. E. N., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., et al.: The IntCal20 Northern Hemisphere Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curve (0–55 cal kBP), Radiocarbon, 62(4), 725-757. doi:10.1017/RDC.2020.41

How to cite: Therre, S., Fohlmeister, J., Fleitmann, D., Friedrich, R., Schröder-Ritzrau, A., Lausecker, M., and Frank, N.: Soil Carbon Dynamics and Atmospheric Signals in Stalagmite Radiocarbon at Sofular Cave, Turkey, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14942, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14942, 2021.

EGU21-15015 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

A novel sampling system for radiocarbon measurements of atmospheric methane 

Giulia Zazzeri, Xiaomei Xu, and Heather Graven

Radiocarbon in atmospheric methane (Δ14CH4) is a powerful tracer of fossil methane emissions and can be used to attribute methane emissions to fossil or biogenic sources. However, few Δ14CH4 measurements are reported since 20001,2, due to challenges in sampling enough carbon for 14C measurements and in assessing the influence of 14C emissions from nuclear power plants on the 14C observations.

At Imperial College London we addressed the sampling limitation by developing a unique sampling system that separates carbon at the point of sampling and uses small traps of molecular sieves. Collection of a sample is made by three main steps: 1) removal of CO2 and CO from air, 2) combustion of CH4 into CO2 and 3) adsorption of the combustion-derived CO2 onto the molecular sieve trap. 14C analysis of our samples was carried out at the accelerator mass spectrometry facility at UCI. This novel system has been used for collection of samples in central London and has been made portable for collection of samples in different settings. 

Here we describe the system and report the evaluation of the measurement uncertainty and the processing blank. We achieved a measurement precision of 6 ‰, which is similar to or better than the reported precision of the most recent observations1,3.

1 Townsend‐Small et al JGR 117(D7) 2012

2 Sparrow et al Sci. Adv 4(1) 2018

3 Espic et al Radiocarbon 61( 5) 2019

How to cite: Zazzeri, G., Xu, X., and Graven, H.: A novel sampling system for radiocarbon measurements of atmospheric methane , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15015, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15015, 2021.

EGU21-3392 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.3

Compound-specific radiocarbon ages of soil and sedimentary leaf wax biomarkers in an arid high-altitude environment

Bernhard Aichner, Janet Rethemeyer, Merle Gierga, Alexander Stolz, Monika Mętrak, Mateusz Wilk, Małgorzata Suska-Malawska, Dirk Sachse, Ilhomjon Rajabov, Nasimjon Rajabov, and Steffen Mischke

Compound-specific radiocarbon analysis (CSRA) of leaf waxes has revealed significant lag times before compounds are deposited in marine and lacustrine sediments. No such data so far exist for a cold and arid high altitude lake system, where carbon turnover and biomarker fluxes to sediments are expected to be relatively low. To elucidate transport dynamics of terrestrial leaf waxes in such an environment (MAT: -4°C, MAP <100mm), we determined CSRA-ages of selected long-chain n-alkanes in surface soil samples (0-10 cm), collected from alpine meadows in the catchment of Lake Karakul (Pamirs, Tajikistan), and in two sections  of a well dated sediment core from the same lake. We aimed to answer the question if there is a potential bias in the interpretation of biomarker records, in case the leaf wax compounds are significantly older than the sediment age-model suggests.

nC29- and nC31-alkanes in the soil samples exhibited variable ages, ranging from 105±79 to 2260±155 cal. yrs BP. In the two sediment core samples, three of the four obtained ages for nC29 and nC31 felt on the very lower ends of the 1ϭ-uncertainty ranges of modelled ages (based on AMS 14CTOC and OSL dating results).

The large span of CSRA-ages of soils gives evidence for heterogeneous decomposition and transport conditions in the lake catchment. We hypothesize that compounds with longest pre-aging contributed in lower proportions to the accumulated lake sediments and further suggest that sedimentary leaf waxes represent compounds with intermediate turnover time in soils, for example originating from alluvial plains close to the shores. Overall, the obtained results give evidence that sedimentary leaf wax compounds in this cold and arid high altitude setting are potentially older than the conventional age-model indicates. On the other hand, these findings need to be interpreted in context of the generally large uncertainty ranges of such age-models, which are further influenced by unknown factors for example changes of reservoir effects. 

How to cite: Aichner, B., Rethemeyer, J., Gierga, M., Stolz, A., Mętrak, M., Wilk, M., Suska-Malawska, M., Sachse, D., Rajabov, I., Rajabov, N., and Mischke, S.: Compound-specific radiocarbon ages of soil and sedimentary leaf wax biomarkers in an arid high-altitude environment, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3392, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3392, 2021.

CL5.1.4 – Geochronological tools for environmental reconstructions

EGU21-822 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

The Paleochrono probabilistic model to derive a consistent chronology for several paleoclimatic sites

Frédéric Parrenin, Lucie Bazin, Christo Buizert, Emilie Capron, Jai Chowdry Beeman, Ellen Corrick, Russell Drysdale, Kenji Kawamura, Amaëlle Landais, Robert Mulvaney, Ikumi Oyabu, and Sune Rasmussen

Past climatic and environmental changes can be reconstructed thanks to paleoclimatic archives such as ice cores, marine sediment cores, lake sediment cores, speleothems, tree rings, corals, etc. The dating of these natural archives is crucial for deciphering the temporal sequence of events during past climate changes. It is also essential to estimate the absolute and relative errors of such estimated chronologies. This task is, however, complex since it involves the combination of different dating approaches on different paleoclimatic sites and often different types of archives. Here we present Paleochrono, a new probabilistic model to derive a common and probalistically optimal chronology for several paleoclimatic sites with potentially different types of archives. Paleochrono is based on the inversion of an archiving model: a varying deposition rate (also named sedimentation or accumulation rate) and also, for ice cores, a lock-in-depth of air bubbles (since air is not trapped at surface) and a thinning function (since ice undergoes flow). The model integrates several types of chronological information: prior knowledge of the archiving process, independently dated horizons, depth intervals of known duration, undated stratigraphic links between records, and, for ice cores, Δdepth observations (depth differences between synchronous events recorded in the bubbles and ice, respectively). The optimization is formulated as a least-squares problem, assuming that all densities of probabilities are near-Gaussian and that the model is almost linear in the vicinity of the best solution. Paleochrono is the successor of IceChrono, which was dealing only with ice-core records. Paleochrono performs better than IceChrono in terms of computational efficiency, ease of use, and accuracy. We demonstrate the ability of Paleochrono in a new AICC2012-Hulu dating experiment, which combines the AICC2012 dating experiment, based on records from five polar ice cores, with data from two U/Th-dated speleothems from Hulu Cave (China). We analyse the performance of Paleochrono in terms of computing time and memory usage in various dating experiments. Paleochrono is freely available under the MIT open source license.

How to cite: Parrenin, F., Bazin, L., Buizert, C., Capron, E., Chowdry Beeman, J., Corrick, E., Drysdale, R., Kawamura, K., Landais, A., Mulvaney, R., Oyabu, I., and Rasmussen, S.: The Paleochrono probabilistic model to derive a consistent chronology for several paleoclimatic sites, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-822, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-822, 2021.

EGU21-1596 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Bayesian improvements to 210Pb dating

Maarten Blaauw, Marco Aquino-Lopez, and J. Andrés Christen

Dating with 210Pb has been instrumental in providing chronologies for sedimentary deposits back to around 100-150 years ago — a key period for recent environmental events such as increased pollution caused by industry developments. However, currently available 210Pb age-models often disagree with and/or cannot incorporate other types of dates, depend highly on the correct estimation of background 210Pb, often underestimate uncertainties and are limited by unrealistic assumptions of sediment accumulation over time. Plum is open-source Bayesian age-modelling software that solves the above problems. It can integrate other dates, produce realistic uncertainty estimates, and extend 210Pb chronologies several decades further back in time. Our method thus enables much more robust chronologies for studies of recent environmental change.

How to cite: Blaauw, M., Aquino-Lopez, M., and Christen, J. A.: Bayesian improvements to 210Pb dating, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1596, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1596, 2021.

EGU21-13432 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Evaluating the age-depth models based on coupled 14C and 210Pb data

Natalia Piotrowska and Jarosław Sikorski

14C and 210Pb methods are regularly used to determine ages and accumulation rates of peat, fen and lake sediments. The overall aim is to estimate the age of discrete layers, which were analysed for environmental proxies. Ideally, the age-depth models should fit the investigated proxy in terms of resolution and give precise results. Nevertheless, the differences in the nature of dating methods and statistical treatment of data need to be considered.

Both 14C and 210Pb signals are integrated over a considerable period. Moreover, they originate from different sources. 210Pb is bound to aerosols and trapped by peat while 14C is bound from atmospheric CO2 by photosynthesis. Hence, 210Pb gives the time span during which the aerosol has been buried, whereas the 14C date gives the time of death of a plant.

After the analysis, the results are usually combined into an age-depth model. This process involves statistical treatment of data during which specific assumptions and simplifications are made. Depending on the algorithm, they lead to alterations in modelled ages compared to unmodelled data. Principally it is a desired result–increasing the robustness and decreasing the uncertainty of the age-depth model. In worse cases models alter the modelled ages to an unacceptable extent, which may be overlooked if the results are treated automatically.

We test the performance of various age-depth modelling algorithms (OxCal P_Sequence, Bacon, clam, MOD-AGE) on a selected true dataset where 14C and 210Pb data overlap and are used simultaneously. Afterwards, a point estimate is selected and used for proxy analysis on a time scale and for calculation of the accumulation rates. We also check the influence of 210Pb calculation method (CRS, ModAge, extrapolation technique) on derived age-depth models.

Together with the thickness of analysed samples the age model provides an information about the time resolution of proxy analysis. While the age-depth curves, except outstanding circumstances, give relatively similar answers within 95% uncertainty ranges, the differences are observed in point estimates and accumulation rate, and they may be relevant for the palaeoenvironmental studies. With this exercise we attempt to assess the uncertainty beyond simple age errors reported from the measurements and age-depth modelling.

How to cite: Piotrowska, N. and Sikorski, J.: Evaluating the age-depth models based on coupled 14C and 210Pb data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13432, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13432, 2021.

The extensivity of sand dunes in continental interiors makes the understating of their morphodynamical properties valuable for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions and the interpretation of landscape evolution. Nevertheless, the study of aeolian landscape development at the million-years timescale is hampered by the complex interaction of factors determining dune migration and the inherently self-destructive nature of their chronostratigraphy, thus limiting the applicability of traditional luminescence-based dating methods for configuring processes beyond ~300 Ka. In this study, we present a standalone program that simulates aeolian transport based on luminescence-derived chronologies coupled with numerical modelling of cosmogenic nuclides accumulation. This integrative approach reveals ancient phases of sand irruption and provides a data-based scheme facilitating the morphodynamical study of aeolian processes over multiple timescales. We present a case study of the program application by analyzing data from the Australian Simpson Desert, unfolding several phases of aeolian vitality since the late Pliocene. The synchronicity of the results with drastic changes in environmental settings exemplifies the applicability of process-based modelling in constructing a timeframe of key landscape evolution events in arid environments by studying aeolian landforms. Finally, the relationships between model parameters used to determine environmental settings on sand migration patterns make the program a powerful tool to further investigating triggers and mechanisms of aeolian processes.

How to cite: Vainer, S. and Ben Dor, Y.: Cosmolian: High-resolution Integrated OSL and CN modelling Program for Sand Transportation in Eolian Realms (HIPSTER), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7120, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7120, 2021.

EGU21-1959 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Analyzing Ca-41 sample at 1E-15 abundance level with cold atom trap techniques

Tian Xia, Tong-Yan Xia, Wei-Wei Sun, Wei Jiang, and Zheng-Tian Lu

On earth, Calcium-41 is produced as a cosmogenic isotope via neutron capture process, leaving a natural isotopic abundance of 10-15 on earth surface. Calcium is also of vital importance for the metabolism of biological organisms. Consequently, analysis of the long lived radioactive isotope Calcium-41 is of great importance in geoscience, archeology and life sciences. The half-life of Calcium-41 is 1.03 x 105 years. It is a good candidate in dating rock and bone samples ranging from 50,000 to 1,000,000 years old.

The available techniques for trace analysis of Calcium-41 include accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) and resonance ionization mass spectroscopy (RIMS). The detection limit of RIMS is on the level of 10-11 due to the interference of Potassium-41, which is difficult to remove from the sample. The analysis with high-energy AMS is more expensive than the table top apparatus, and it also faces similar problem as RIMS method.

We develop an atom trap trace analysis(ATTA) apparatus for Calcium-41 analysis to the sensitivity of 10-15 abundance level by one hour of single atom counting. ATTA uses laser tuned at the resonant wavelength for a specific element and isotope to slow down and capture single atom by fluorescence radiation. It has a very high selectivity of element and isotope, which is more advantageous than AMS and RIMS to avoid isobar interference. ATTA has been used in analysis of Krypton-81, Argon-39 dating of the hydrological samples. This work on high sensitivity Calcium-41 analysis is very promising in dating the geochemical sample to determine the exposure ages of rocks or in cosmochemistry for investigations on terrestrial ages.

How to cite: Xia, T., Xia, T.-Y., Sun, W.-W., Jiang, W., and Lu, Z.-T.: Analyzing Ca-41 sample at 1E-15 abundance level with cold atom trap techniques, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1959, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1959, 2021.

EGU21-8440 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Assessing time uncertainty and sediment mixing using three-dimensional high-resolution radiocarbon measurements from a marine boxcore

Alexandra Zuhr, Andrew Dolman, Jeroen Groeneveld, Sze Ling Ho, Hendrik Grotheer, and Thomas Laepple

Assessing the effects of sediment inhomogeneity on the core stratigraphy and on proxy records is essential to perform reliable climate reconstructions from marine sediments. Inhomogeneities can stem from sediment mixing (e.g., bioturbation) which destroys the temporally layered climatic information stored in proxy carrier. Thus, in addition to the measurement error, the time-uncertainty in radiocarbon-dated sediments must be taken into account for depth-age modelling in order to obtain an unambiguous time scale.

Here, we present a case-study based on a boxcore (OR1-1218-C2-BC) from the South China Sea (2208 m water depth) covering the last 20 kyr. The boxcore was divided into nine sub-cores by a grid of 3 x 3 (each sub-core is 8 x 8 cm with a length of 34 cm), yielding a total surface area of 576 cm2. This sampling scheme offers the possibility for detailed, three-dimensional analyses on small spatial scales. Radiocarbon measurements were performed in every sub-core for seven depth layers, each with a fraction of 200 crushed and well mixed foraminifera (Trilobatus sacculifer, 250 – 350 µm) to study the horizontal sediment heterogeneity. In addition, small sample (5 specimen) replicate radiocarbon measurements from a single sediment sample allow to estimate the age heterogeneity within a 1 cm sediment slice and thus the vertical mixing from bioturbation. The replicate radiocarbon dates suggest a bioturbation depth of around 12 cm; however, the downcore radiocarbon dates show no clear sign of a well-mixed bioturbation layer. Using statistical analysis (e.g., spatial correlation measures and variance analyses), we separate the errors from the radiocarbon measurements, the finite sample size and both the vertical and horizontal heterogeneity. Comparing the radiocarbon dates in the sub-cores indicates a small horizontal heterogeneity compared to the vertical mixing.

The three-dimensional data set allows us to quantify the effect introduced by (post-depositional) sediment mixing on the age-estimate as well as on the proxy signal and to discuss the effects on low-sedimentation climate records. This will provide a better quantification of uncertainties within proxy time series.

How to cite: Zuhr, A., Dolman, A., Groeneveld, J., Ho, S. L., Grotheer, H., and Laepple, T.: Assessing time uncertainty and sediment mixing using three-dimensional high-resolution radiocarbon measurements from a marine boxcore, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8440, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8440, 2021.

EGU21-13962 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Constraining past bedrock surface temperatures at the Gorner glacier, Switzerland, using feldspar thermoluminescence for surface paleothermometry. 

Joanne Elkadi, Rabiul Biswas, Georgina King, and Frédéric Herman

Our ability to quantify past climate conditions is crucial for predicting future scenarios and landscape evolution. To date, reconstructions of the Earth’s past climate have mostly relied on the use of climate proxies to infer previous surface conditions (e.g. Jones and Mann, 2004 for a review). However, few methods exist that are capable of directly measuring past temperature histories, particularly in terrestrial settings.

The aim of this study is to contribute towards a more detailed understanding of glacial and interglacial temperature fluctuations across the Central and Western Alps, from the Last Glacial Maximum to present day, by constraining past temperatures of exposed bedrock surfaces adjacent to the Gorner glacier in Zermatt, Switzerland. This is done through the recently developed application of feldspar thermoluminescence to surface paleothermometry (Biswas et al., 2018; 2020). The thermoluminescence signal of feldspar, from room temperature to 450°C, is sourced from a continuous distribution of electron traps within the crystal lattice (Biswas et al., 2018). The release of this trapped charge is temperature dependent and thus, at room temperature, results in traps with a range of thermal stabilities with electron residence times ranging from less than a year to several billion years (Aitken 1985). Traps sensitive to typical surface temperature variations (e.g. ∼10°C) have been shown to lie between 200°C and 250°C of the TL glow curve (Biswas et al., 2020). From this temperature range, five thermometers (200°C to 250°C in 10°C intervals) can be used together as a multi-thermometer, and subsequently combined with a Bayesian inversion approach to constrain thermal histories over the last ∼50 kyr (Biswas et al., 2020).

In this study, the preliminary temperature histories of five bedrock samples with independently constrained exposure ages, exposed progressively since the Last Glacial Maximum, will be presented.

References:

Aitken, M.J., 1985. Thermoluminescence Dating. Academic Press, London.

Jones, P.D., Mann, M.E., 2004. Climate over past millennia. Reviews of Geophysics, 42, 2004.

Biswas, R.H., Herman, F., King, G.E., Braun, J., 2018. Thermoluminescence of feldspar as a multi-thermochronometer to constrain the temporal variation of rock exhumation in the recent past. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 495, 56-68.

Biswas, R.H., Herman, F., King, G.E., Lehmann, B., Singhvi, A.K., 2020. Surface paleothermometry using low temperature thermoluminescence of feldspar. Climate of the Past, 16, 2075-2093.

How to cite: Elkadi, J., Biswas, R., King, G., and Herman, F.: Constraining past bedrock surface temperatures at the Gorner glacier, Switzerland, using feldspar thermoluminescence for surface paleothermometry. , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13962, 2021.

EGU21-237 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Luminescence dating of the last glaciation maximum in the southern Black Forest, Germany: Preliminary results

Felix Martin Hofmann, Alexander Fülling, and Frank Preusser

EGU21-8099 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Using OSL dating data for quartz provenance analysis in late Quaternary sediments of Amazonia 

Priscila Souza, Fabiano Pupim, Ian del Río, Fernanda Rodrigues, Thays Mineli, Naomi Porat, Gelvam Hartmann, and André Sawakuchi

Quartz grains are resistant minerals and abundant on Earth´s surface. They have been extensively used for optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of Quaternary sediments from a large range of depositional environments. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the luminescence properties of the quartz can also be a useful tool for provenance analysis, because of the signal properties inherited from its parent rock, weathering conditions, and depositional history (i.e. cycles of erosion, transport, and deposition). These provenance studies are based on the OSL sensitivity (i.e. the light emitted per unit mass per radiation dose) of the first second of the luminesce signal of the quartz, using relatively fast and low-cost measurements. Since laboratories worldwide already have an extensive database with results of quartz signals primarily measured for dating studies, these data could potentially be repurposed for sensitivity analysis.

Here, we investigate the use of OSL quartz signals, originally measured for dating, for now characterizing the quartz OSL sensitivity and their usefulness for provenance analysis. The samples we studied are from Amazon fluvial systems: two Holocene endmembers from the Xingu and Solimões rivers, representatives of cratonic and Andean sediment sources, respectively, and a Pleistocene sample from Içá Formation, a paleo-fluvial system whose provenance is not fully known. First, we evaluate our approach by calculating the OSL quartz sensitivity of all quartz signals (i.e. signals derived from the natural, regenerative, and test doses) measured in a dating sequence with the Single Aliquot Regenerative dose (SAR) protocol. Such analysis gives the basis for deciding which signal, if any, should be prioritized for sensitivity calculation. Then, we compare the OSL sensitivities derived from quartz signals measured using the conventional sensitivity protocol with those measured by the conventional dating protocol. Finally, we deduce the sediment source of the Pleistocene Içá Formation based on the modern analogues (the Holocene endmembers).

Our preliminary results show that: it is feasible to use data from dating sequences for sensitivity calculation; OSL quartz signal derived from the natural test doses (Ln) is the best candidate for sensitivity calculation; the sensitivities provided by our approach are slightly larger than those calculated using the conventional sensitivity protocol; and, the Pleistocene Içá Formation represents a mixed-source (Andean and Cratonic), which is different from the presumed modern analogue represented by the Solimões river, which is dominated by Andean sediments.

How to cite: Souza, P., Pupim, F., del Río, I., Rodrigues, F., Mineli, T., Porat, N., Hartmann, G., and Sawakuchi, A.: Using OSL dating data for quartz provenance analysis in late Quaternary sediments of Amazonia , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8099, 2021.

EGU21-14759 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

First results of optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) analyses from loess-palaeosol sections along the Rhône Valley, France.

Annette Kadereit, Nora Pfaffner, Sebastian Kreutzer, Tianhao Wang, Sophie Cornu, Lars Zipf, Olivier Moine, Mathieu Bosq, Pascal Bertran, and Daniela Sauer

Loess-palaeosol sequences are most important archives for reconstructing terrestrial palaeoenvironments. However, in the European Mediterranean, these archives are surprisingly scarcely investigated. In southern France, respective sediment-soil archives were last investigated in more detail in the middle of the last century, when major construction works in the region provided access to numerous loess exposures. However, this was before the breakthrough of luminescence-dating as a major chronometric method for the Later Pleistocene. Thus, the loess was poorly dated. Later, Mediterranean loess archives attracted fewer researchers than their central-European counterparts. Reasons for this may be that, compared to the loess belt of temperate Europe, Mediterranean loess deposits are often reworked and mixed with slope deposits. Moreover, palaeosols that developed during climate ameliorations of the last glacial period seem to reflect less pronounced temperature and humidity shifts than those in temperate regions. The most prominent palaeosol developed within the last-glacial loess in the Rhône Valley is a brown palaeosol with large carbonate concretions at its base. However, it is usually severely truncated.

We allocated joint research efforts from groups in Germany and France to track last-glacial sedimentation and climate shifts in loess-palaeosol sections along the Rhône Valley, south of the confluence of the River Saone at Lyon. Thereby, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating serves as a vital tool for establishing chronometries for the loess-palaeosol sections in southern France, with first results from the Rhône Valley in Bosq et al. (2018, 2020). We summarize results from two sites that are regarded as key sections for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction along the Rhône Valley as evaluated from inspections during fieldwork, complemented by several smaller sections. Our presentation focusses on challenges met with OSL dating attempts of these Mediterranean archives and first achievements in backing the stratigraphies established by sediment-soil analyses in the field and laboratory by chronometric data.

References

Bosq, M., Bertran, P., Degeai, J.-P., Kreutzer, S., Queffelec, A., Moine, O., Morin, E., 2018. Last Glacial aeolian landforms and deposits in the Rhône Valley (SE France): Spatial distribution and grain-size characterization. Geomorphology 318, 1–20. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2018.06.010

Bosq, M., Kreutzer, S., Bertran, P., Degeai, J.-P., Dugas, P., Kadereit, A., Lanos, P., Moine, O., Pfaffner, N., Queffelec, A., Sauer, D., 2020. Chronostratigraphy of two Late Pleistocene loess-palaeosol sequences in the Rhône Valley (southeast France). Quaternary Science Reviews 245, 106473. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106473

How to cite: Kadereit, A., Pfaffner, N., Kreutzer, S., Wang, T., Cornu, S., Zipf, L., Moine, O., Bosq, M., Bertran, P., and Sauer, D.: First results of optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) analyses from loess-palaeosol sections along the Rhône Valley, France., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14759, 2021.

EGU21-7238 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Investigating glacial and postglacial sediment deposition and relative sea level changes at Ruddons Point, Fife, Scotland

Sarah Boyd, Richard Bates, Tim Kinnaird, Tim Raub, and Aayush Srivastava

Ruddons Point, situated on the Firth of Forth coastline, Scotland, is a laterally extensive terrace of glacial and marine sediment deposits which are raised above current sea level. The deposits are situated near to Kincraig Point, a key site that records a series of stepped erosional platforms carved into the local tuff and agglomerate bedrock, representing a series of post Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) paleoshorelines. The raised marine deposits of Ruddons Point are composed of sand, shell, gravel and cobble horizons, which have been deposited unconformably on glacial tills and clays. 1km inland, incised by a small stream (the Cocklemill Burn), numerous cut banks reveal further raised deposits. Previous attempts to date these sediments have produced conflicting depositional histories, with no clear correlation to the Kincraig Point paleoshorelines or those dated further west along the Forth Valley. To this end, a multidisciplinary study was conducted to provide a detailed geochronology and interpretation of this diverse field area, ranging from the dating of glacial clays, thought to be deposited during the early phases of sedimentation leading up to the LGM, through to establishing the timing of marine sediment deposition in the Mid to Late Holocene. Geophysical electrical surveys were employed to supplement the subsurface investigations of the shore and adjacent saltmarsh and to aid construction of a sedimentary deposition model. Optically stimulated luminescence dating and radiocarbon dating were carried out on selected samples through the raised deposits and subsurface cores to provide a chronometric framework. Results demonstrate that subsurface clay horizons date to ~29 ka, indicating deposition at the onset of the last glacial. Inland raised deposits along the Cocklemill Burn preserve periods of sedimentation ranging from ~8.5 ka to ~4.5ka, and suggest a punctuated rise in sea level during the Mid Holocene. The nearshore raised sands and gravels of Ruddons Point are dated to ~3.5ka, deposited during a period of relative sea level (RSL) fall in the Late Holocene. The study concludes that the combination of detailed fieldwork, geophysical survey and dating allow the scope for complex landscape changes to be identified and further the understanding of the interplay between glacial isostatic adjustment and RSL changes across the postglacial coastlines of Fife.

 

How to cite: Boyd, S., Bates, R., Kinnaird, T., Raub, T., and Srivastava, A.: Investigating glacial and postglacial sediment deposition and relative sea level changes at Ruddons Point, Fife, Scotland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7238, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7238, 2021.

EGU21-4891 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Multi-proxy studies of the Late Glacial fluvio-aeolian succession in the type site Mierzyn, central Poland 

Moska Piotr, Sokołowski Robert, Jary Zdzisław, Zieliński Paweł, Raczyk Jerzy, Krawczyk Marcin, Skurzyński Jacek, Poręba Grzegorz, Łopuch Michał, Szymak Agnieszka, and Tudyka Konrad

Multi-proxy studies (including sedimentological, pedological, radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating methods) were used to establish origin and chronology of depositional processes in the type section Mierzyn, central Poland. The investigated key site is located in the extraglacial zone of the Last Glaciation, ca. 130 km to the south from the Last Glacial Maximum in the Luciąża river valley area. In the studied profile (16 m thick) two lithofacial complexes were identified. The lower, fluvio-aeolian complex consists of silty-sandy sediments (1.6 m) deposited. The final phase of fluvio-aeolian deposition is expressed by initial pedogenic processes. Above is located aeolian complex (13 m of thickness). Three aeolian units are separated by two palaeosols.

To establish stratigraphic framework of depositional and pedogenic processes, four samples for radiocarbon dating from palaeosols and twelve samples for OSL dating from sandy units were collected. The obtained results reveal very good agreement of both absolute dating methods. It led to reconstruct chronology of main palaeoenvironmental changes. The fluvio-aeolian complex and the lowermost part of aeolian complex (below the lower palaeosol) were deposited in the Oldest Dryas in relatively cool and dry climate conditions. The amelioration of climate in the Bølling interstadial caused development of pedogenic processes expressed by 0.3 m thick palaeosol. Main part of aeolian complex (10 m of thickness) was deposited in the Older Dryas. The upper palaeosol developed in the Allerød interstadial as a result of the next amelioration of the climate. During the Younger Dryas was deposited the uppermost part of aeolian complex.

Classic development of fluvial to- aeolian succession in the Mierzyn site as well as detailed chronology based on two independent absolute age methods reveal that it can be treated as stratotype for the Late Glacial and correlated with other type sections in the Central and Western Europe.

Ackowledgments

Presented results were obtained with support of Polish National Science Centre, contract number 2018/30/E/ST10/00616.

 

How to cite: Piotr, M., Robert, S., Zdzisław, J., Paweł, Z., Jerzy, R., Marcin, K., Jacek, S., Grzegorz, P., Michał, Ł., Agnieszka, S., and Konrad, T.: Multi-proxy studies of the Late Glacial fluvio-aeolian succession in the type site Mierzyn, central Poland , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4891, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4891, 2021.

EGU21-7314 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

The First Holocene Varve Chronology for the UK: based on the integration of varve counting, radiocarbon dating and tephrostratigraphy from Diss Mere (UK).

Celia Martin-Puertas, Amy A. Walsh, Simon P.E Blockley, Poppy Harding, George E. Biddulph, Palmer Adrian, Ramisch Arne, and Brauer Achim

This paper reports the first Holocene varved chronology for the lacustrine sediment record of Diss Mere in the UK. The record of Diss Mere is 15 m long, and shows 4.2 m of finely-laminated sediments, which are present between ca. 9 and 13 m of core depth. The microfacies analysis identified three major seasonal patterns of deposition, which corroborate the annual nature of sedimentation throughout the whole interval. The sediments are diatomaceous organic and carbonate varves with an average thickness of 0.45 mm. A total of 8473 varves were counted with maximum counting error of up to  40 varves by the bottom of the varved sequence. To tie the resulting floating varve chronology to the IntCal 2020 radiocarbon timescale, we used a Bayesian Deposition model (P_Sequencewith outlier detection) on all available chronological data from the core. The data included five radiocarbon dates, two known tephra layers (Glen Garry and OMH-185) with calendar ages based on Bayesian modelling of sequences of radiocarbon ages, and the relative varve counts between dated points. The resulting age-depth model (DISSV-2020) dates the varved sequence between ca. 2100 and 10,300 cal BP and age uncertainties are decadal in scale (95% confidence). 

How to cite: Martin-Puertas, C., Walsh, A. A., Blockley, S. P. E., Harding, P., Biddulph, G. E., Adrian, P., Arne, R., and Achim, B.: The First Holocene Varve Chronology for the UK: based on the integration of varve counting, radiocarbon dating and tephrostratigraphy from Diss Mere (UK)., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7314, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7314, 2021.

EGU21-13195 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

A new Last Glacial-Interglacial Transition varve record from Chilean Patagonia

Joshua Pike, Adrian Palmer, Varyl Thorndycraft, and Ian Matthews

High-resolution sedimentary archives, such as glaciolacustrine varve sequences formed in proglacial lakes, can enable detailed reconstructions of past glacier dynamics, assess regional to global climate (a)synchronicity and disentangle oceanic and atmospheric climatic forcing mechanisms. Specifically, glaciolacustrine varved sequences can be utilised to investigate, at an annual resolution, the rates and/or duration of change during deglaciation of a former glacial basin, significantly refining models of ice-sheet deglaciation. Additionally, the identification of tephra layers deposited within varved sequences offer the potential to provide isochronous marker layers, enabling high-precision correlations between sites and palaeoenvironmental archives, and an independent means of generating an absolute age for the varve chronology.

We present new varve data obtained from sediment sections in Chile Chico (-46.53oS, -71.73oW) in the Lago General Carrera (Chile)/Buenos Aires (Argentina) basin in central Patagonia. Here, an ice-contact, proglacial lake formed during the recession of an ice lobe of the former Patagonian Ice Sheet from its local Last Glacial Maximum position (18,778 ± 615 to 18,086 ± 2141). Sequences of laminated glaciolacustrine sediment accumulated in the palaeolake and have subsequently been exposed following lake drainage. We report on the detailed macro- and micro-facies of the Chile Chico sediments as well as an updated tephrostratigraphy for the region. In particular we (1) develop a process model for the formation of melt season and non-melt season components that suggest a varved origin; (2) present a ~3.5 kyr varve thickness record for Chile Chico that post-dates (<17 ka BP) the Fenix Chico Master Varve Chronology, and (3) detail pilot tephrochronological assessment of the sequences. Consideration is also given to the challenges associated with developing both the varve chronology, where detection of varves is variable and hiatuses and deformation exist within the sequences, and tephrochronology, where distinguishing between eruptive events with this level of stratigraphic resolution is unparalleled in the region.

1Bendle, J.M., Palmer, A.P., Thorndycraft, V.R., Matthews, I. P. (2019) Phased Patagonian Ice Sheet response to Southern Hemisphere atmospheric and oceanic warming between 18 and 17 ka. Sci Rep 9, 4133

How to cite: Pike, J., Palmer, A., Thorndycraft, V., and Matthews, I.: A new Last Glacial-Interglacial Transition varve record from Chilean Patagonia, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13195, 2021.

EGU21-10075 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Using CT scans to count varves in lake sediments. Application to Lake Sagtjernet, southeastern Norway

Eirik Gottschalk Ballo, Manon Bajard, Eivind Støren, and Jostein Bakke

Annually laminated sediments, also called varves, are valuable natural archives to reconstruct past environments and climate. Until now, the most common and reliable procedure to count varves has been to produce overlapping thin sections of the entire sediment sequence and counting in the microscope — a process that can take months to complete. Replacing this laborious method has been a long ongoing process within the varve community, and a task that we now may be getting with advancements in analytical tools. This study assesses the use of CT scanning to produce varve chronologies, applying it to the ferruginous sediments of Lake Sagtjernet in southeastern Norway — the first non-glacial varved lake sediment sequence in Norway continuously covering the last 4300 years.

Microfacies analyses of the sediments show that the varves are formed by cyclical deposition of iron and manganese. Oxygen measurements through 2013-2014 show permanent anoxic bottom waters while the seasonal turnover only reaching a depth of c. 6 m (out of a total 12 m depth). Combined with measurements of iron from the water column (highly enriched in the bottom waters) we suggest to classify Lake Sagtjernet as a ferruginous meromictic lake.

Varve counting on CT scans resulted in a 4300-year chronology, which we compared to an independent radiocarbon chronology (based on 17 14C dates, radionuclide and 210Pb analyses). Our results show that all of the varve ages fall within the 95% confidence interval of the radiocarbon chronology. However, some sections of the sediments with lower concentrations of iron and manganese illustrate vague boundaries between laminae in the CT scans — increasing age uncertainties in the chronology. These age uncertainties can be reduced by using XRF scanning or thin sections in parallel with CT scans to evaluate the boundaries. Based on these results, we conclude that CT scanning is a fast and non-destructive method for producing varve chronologies.

How to cite: Ballo, E. G., Bajard, M., Støren, E., and Bakke, J.: Using CT scans to count varves in lake sediments. Application to Lake Sagtjernet, southeastern Norway, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10075, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10075, 2021.

EGU21-11404 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Tephrochronological evidence of a later Younger Dryas ice-sheet maximum in central Norway

Simon A. Larsson, Stefan Wastegård, and Fredrik Høgaas

The Scandinavian Ice Sheet responded time-transgressively to the Younger Dryas (Greenland Stadial 1) cold event with large regional variations. Around Trondheimsfjorden in central Norway, the Tautra Moraines and the Hoklingen Moraines have long been assumed to have formed by glacial readvances during this event, as they have been dated to c. 12.7 and 11.6 cal. ka BP respectively (Olsen et al., 2015), mainly based on radiocarbon dating of often marine fossils. The Tautra Moraines, being the outer ridges of the two, should thus represent the maximum ice-sheet extent in this region during the Younger Dryas.

This ice-front position established a pro-glacial lake west of present-day Leksvik village on the Fosen peninsula (Selnes, 1982), which covered the Lomtjønnin lakes and Lomtjønnmyran fens, and drained through a spillway via Lake Rørtjønna. Some 20 km inland (northeast) from this location, inside the Tautra Moraines, the location of the Damåsmyran bog was covered by the ice sheet at that time.

By examining sediments from these sites for occurrences of volcanic ashes (visible and cryptotephra), combined with radiocarbon dating, we find that the ice front remained at the Tautra Moraines until the late Younger Dryas, contrary to the previous chronology (and overriding the suggested formation age of the Hoklingen Moraines). These findings comply with several recent reconstructions of the deglaciation at other sites in western (Lohne et al., 2012; Mangerud et al., 2016) and southern Norway (Romundset et al., 2019) and are a strong example of the usefulness of tephrochronology in the reconstruction of past ice-sheet dynamics.

 

References

Lohne, Ø.S., Mangerud, J. & Svendsen, J.I. (2012) Timing of the Younger Dryas glacial maximum in Western Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science, vol. 27, pp. 81–88.

Mangerud, J., Aarseth, I., et al. (2016) A major re-growth of the Scandinavian Ice Sheet in western Norway during Allerød–Younger Dryas. Quaternary Science Reviews, vol. 132, pp. 175–205.

Olsen, L., Høgaas, F. & Sveian, H. (2015) Age of the Younger Dryas ice-marginal substages in Mid-Norway—Tautra and Hoklingen, based on a compilation of 14C-dates. Norges geologiske undersøkelse Bulletin, vol. 454, pp. 1–13.

Romundset, A., Lakeman, T.R. & Høgaas, F. (2019) Coastal lake records add constraints to the age and magnitude of the Younger Dryas ice-front oscillation along the Skagerrak coastline in southern Norway. Journal of Quaternary Science, vol. 34, pp. 112–124.

Selnes, H. (1982) Paleo-økologiske undersøkelser omkring israndavsetninger på Fosenhalvøya, Midt-Norge. Thesis at the Department of Botany, University of Trondheim.

How to cite: Larsson, S. A., Wastegård, S., and Høgaas, F.: Tephrochronological evidence of a later Younger Dryas ice-sheet maximum in central Norway, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11404, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11404, 2021.

EGU21-1955 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Novel method for determining 234U-238U ages of Devils Hole 2 cave calcite (Nevada)

Xianglei Li, Kathleen A. Wendt, Yuri Dublyansky, Gina E. Moseley, Christoph Spötl, and R. Lawrence Edwards

Uranium-uranium (234U-238U) disequilibrium dating can determine the age of secondary carbonates over greater time intervals than the well-established 230Th-234U dating method. Yet it is rarely applied due to unknowns in the initial d234U (d234Ui) value, which result in significant age uncertainties. In order to understand the d234Ui in Devils Hole 2 cave, Nevada, we have determined 110 d234Ui values from phreatic calcite using 230Th-234U disequilibrium dating. The sampled calcite was deposited in Devils Hole 2 between 4 and 590 ka, providing a long-term look at d234Ui variability over time. We then performed multi-linear regression among the d234Ui values and correlative d18O and d13C values. The regression can be used to estimate the d234Ui value of Devils Hole calcite based upon its measured d18O and d13C values. Using this approach and the measured present-day d234U values of Devils Hole 2 calcite, we calculated 110 independent 234U-238U ages. In addition, we used newly measured d18O, d13C, and present-day d234U values to calculate 10 234U-238U ages that range between 676 and 731 ka, thus allowing us to extend the Devils Hole chronology beyond the 230Th-234U-dated chronology while maintaining an age precision of ~2 %. Our results indicate that calcite deposition at Devils Hole 2 cave began no later than 736 ± 11 kyr ago. The novel method presented here may be applied to future speleothem studies in similar hydrogeological settings, given appropriate calibration studies.

How to cite: Li, X., Wendt, K. A., Dublyansky, Y., Moseley, G. E., Spötl, C., and Edwards, R. L.: Novel method for determining 234U-238U ages of Devils Hole 2 cave calcite (Nevada), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1955, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1955, 2021.

EGU21-3322 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Using Micro-CT and petrographic analysis to select optimal U-Th samples from challenging stalagmites.

Jessica Oster, Cameron de Wet, Kate Neal, and Warren Sharp

Speleothem deposits can provide a wealth of critical, detailed paleoclimate information from low and mid-latitude terrestrial environments. A key strength of these archives is that they may be dated precisely using U-Th techniques. Yet, depending on the cave environment, overlying geology, seepage water flow characteristics, and speleothem growth habit, accurate, precise dating of speleothems can be challenging. For example, contamination by Th-bearing detritus degrades precision and accuracy when model-based corrections for initial 230Th are applied, and partial dissolution or secondary infilling of porosity can also lead to inaccurate ages, thereby confounding interpretations of paleoclimatic change. Here we present a new chronology from a Holocene stalagmite, WMC2, from White Moon Cave in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California, USA, that exhibits multiple challenges. Stalagmite WMC2 was not active at the time of collection, but it was in situ, with a top age of 3267 ± 28 yrs BP 1950.  WMC2 calcite has relatively high U (3-7 ppm), however, the stalagmite contains sporadically distributed sub-millimeter pockets of silicate detritus, leading to 100-fold differences in common Th (232Th) concentrations in dating samples (i.e., >80 to <1ppb). Additionally, ages that appear to be anomalously young are associated with zones containing high densities of fluid inclusions, suggesting possible secondary calcite growth. We overcome these challenges using a combination of micro-CT imaging, transmitted-light microscopy and assessing replicate samples.  Micro-CT provides a non-destructive method for imaging the internal structure of the stalagmite, allowing for the sampling of dense, pure calcite. Using this approach, we are able to avoid sub-millimeter pockets of silicate detritus that are not visible from the cut surface of the sample, thereby reducing 232Th concentrations and associated initial 230Th corrections, and obtaining more precise and accurate ages. Dating replicate samples from individual growth bands can confirm or refute whether diagenesis suspected from petrographic study has measurably affected U-Th ages since corrupt ages should scatter more than expected from analytical errors alone. We use our carefully screened ages for WMC2 to evaluate various age modeling approaches typically used for stalagmite proxy records, including those that apply Monte Carlo methods and Bayesian approaches. By employing multiple techniques to optimize stalagmite dating samples, reliable, precise U-Th ages (median 2s ~30 yr) may be obtained from stalagmites previously deemed too flawed for accurate dating, thereby broadening our ability to develop accurately dated speleothem paleoclimate records.

How to cite: Oster, J., de Wet, C., Neal, K., and Sharp, W.: Using Micro-CT and petrographic analysis to select optimal U-Th samples from challenging stalagmites., EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3322, 2021.

EGU21-6666 | vPICO presentations | CL5.1.4

Holocene environmental reconstructions based on organic and mineral deposits of Mt Śnieżnica landslide, Outer Western Carpathians, Poland

Lukasz Pawlik, Daniel Okupny, Pawel Kroh, Piotr Cybul, and Renata Stachowicz-Rybka

The Outer Western Carpathians is a region in Poland with an exceptionally high number of landslides. Besides geohazard issues, these landslides are frequently an archive of the past environmental changes thanks to organic and mineral material accumulated in numerous landlocked pits where small peat bogs formed. We investigated a large landslide body developed on the northside part of Mt Śnieżnica. No historical information exists related to the instability of this region. After finding and examining 20 pits, we selected three for detailed analyses. We extracted three cores with the use of a peat sampler. The cores were 10 cm in diameter and up to 4,2 m deep. Compared to other landslides in this region, the depth of peat bogs is substantial and suggests that the landslide is a minimum of several thousand years old. Laboratory analyses included: bulk density measurement, geochemical analyses (organic matter, SiO2ter, SiO2biog, CaCO3, TOC, TIC, C, N, S, Na, K, Mg, Ca, Fe, Mn, Cu, Zn, and Pb contents) of biogenic deposits (405 samples), AMC radiocarbon dating of plant tissue (20 pieces), macroscopic charcoal (420 samples each representing 1 cm slice of the core). The aim of the present study is 1) to reconstruct environmental conditions in the area, 2) dating of the landslide formation in relation to climate change during the Holocene, and the main events after its triggering: changes in vegetation cover, hillslope instability, e.g., soil erosion, hydroclimate fluctuations, and human impact. Our results fill the gap in environmental reconstruction encountered by other authors investigating this part of the Outer Western Carpathians and push forward the ongoing discussion on the environmental conditions during the Holocene in this region.

How to cite: Pawlik, L., Okupny, D., Kroh, P., Cybul, P., and Stachowicz-Rybka, R.: Holocene environmental reconstructions based on organic and mineral deposits of Mt Śnieżnica landslide, Outer Western Carpathians, Poland, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6666, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6666, 2021.

CL5.2.1 – Simple climate models: development and applications

EGU21-8640 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Emulating Earth System Model land temperature fields with MESMER

Lea Beusch, Lukas Gudmundsson, and Sonia I. Seneviratne

Earth System Models (ESMs) are invaluable tools to study the climate system’s response to greenhouse gas emissions. But their projections are affected by three major sources of uncertainty: (i) internal variability, i.e., natural climate variability, (ii) ESM structural uncertainty, i.e., uncertainty in the response of the climate system to given greenhouse gas concentrations, and (iii) emission scenario uncertainty, i.e., which emission pathway the world chooses. The large computational cost of running full ESMs limits the exploration of this uncertainty phase space since it is only feasible to create a limited number of ESM runs. However, climate change impact and integrated assessment models, which require ESM projections as their input, could profit from a more complete sampling of the climate change uncertainty phase space. In this contribution, we present MESMER (Beusch et al., 2020), a Modular ESM Emulator with spatially Resolved output, which allows for a computationally efficient exploration of the uncertainty space of yearly temperatures. MESMER approximates ESM land temperature fields at a negligible computational cost by expressing grid-point-level temperatures as a function of global mean temperature and an overlaid spatio-temporally correlated variability term. Within MESMER all three major sources of uncertainty can be accounted for. Stochastic simulation of natural climate variability allows to account for internal variability. ESM structural uncertainty can be addressed by calibrating MESMER on different ESMs from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) archives. Finally, emission scenario uncertainty can be accounted for by ingesting forced global mean temperature trajectories from global climate model emulators, such as MAGICC or FaIR. MESMER is a flexible statistical tool which is under active development and in the process of becoming an open-source software.

Beusch, L., Gudmundsson, L., and Seneviratne, S. I. (ESD, 2020): https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-11-139-2020

How to cite: Beusch, L., Gudmundsson, L., and Seneviratne, S. I.: Emulating Earth System Model land temperature fields with MESMER, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8640, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8640, 2021.

EGU21-5706 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Building an Earth Sytem Model emulator for local monthly temperature

Shruti Nath, Quentin Lejeune, Lea Beusch, Carl Schleussner, Lukas Gudmundsson, and Sonia Seneviratne

Emulators are computationally cheap statistical devices that derive simplified relationships from otherwise complex climate models. A recently developed Earth System Model (ESM) emulator, MESMER (Beusch et al. 2020), uses a combination of pattern scaling and a variability emulator to emulate ESM initial-condition ensembles. Linear scaling provides the spatially resolved yearly temperature trend projections from global mean temperature trend values. In addition, the variability emulator stochastically models spatio-temporally correlated local variability, yielding a convincing imitation of the internal climate variability displayed within a multi-model initial condition ensemble. The work presented here extends MESMER’s framework to have a monthly downscaling module, so as to provide spatially resolved monthly temperature values from spatially resolved yearly temperature values. For this purpose, a harmonic model is trained on monthly ESM output to capture monthly cycles and their evolution with changing temperature. Once the mean monthly cycle is sufficiently emulated, a process based understanding of the biases within the harmonic model is undertaken. Such entails employing a Gradient Boosting Regressor tree model (GBR) to explain the residuals from the harmonic model using biophysical climate variables such as albedo and thermal fluxes as explanatory variables. These variables can be rated according to their explanatory power when categorising residuals which furthermore elucidates the main physical processes driving biases in the harmonic model within seasons at the grid point level. Finally we add residual variability ontop of the harmonic model outputs to provide convincing imitations of ESM monthly temperature realisations. The residual variability is generated using an AR(1) process coupled to a multivariate trans-gaussian process so as to maintain spatio-temporal correlations and the non-stationarity in monthly variability with increasing yearly temperatures.

Beusch, L., Gudmundsson, L., & Seneviratne, S. I. (2020). Emulating Earth System Model temperatures: from global mean temperature trajectories to grid-point level realizations on land. Earth System Dynamics, 11(1), 139–159. https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-11-139-2020

 

 

How to cite: Nath, S., Lejeune, Q., Beusch, L., Schleussner, C., Gudmundsson, L., and Seneviratne, S.: Building an Earth Sytem Model emulator for local monthly temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5706, 2021.

EGU21-3707 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Reduced Complexity Model Intercomparison Project (RCMIP)

Zebedee Nicholls and the Reduced complexity model intercomparison project contributors

Reduced-complexity climate models form part of the climate model hierarchy and are increasingly relied upon at the science-policy interface. Historically, evaluation of reduced-complexity climate models has been limited to a number of independent studies. Here we present the reduced-complexity model intercomparison project (RCMIP), the first systematic, community-organised evaluation of reduced-complexity climate models. We introduce the motivation behind RCMIP, where to find information about it and key insights arising from its first two scientific outputs. Future phases of RCMIP will examine specific behaviour of reduced-complexity climate models in more detail, for example their carbon cycle response. We are particulalry keen to hear from users of reduced-complexity models to discuss their use cases, how we can evaluate our models in the way most relevant to them and where key model improvements can be made.

How to cite: Nicholls, Z. and the Reduced complexity model intercomparison project contributors: Reduced Complexity Model Intercomparison Project (RCMIP), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3707, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3707, 2021.

EGU21-6491 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Simulation and Projection of Global Mean Surface Temperature Using the Empirical Model of Global Climate and Comparison to CMIP6 GCMs

Laura McBride, Austin Hope, Timothy Canty, Walter Tribett, Brian Bennett, and Ross Salawitch

The Empirical Model of Global Climate (EM-GC) (Canty et al., ACP, 2013, McBride et al., ESDD, 2020) is a multiple linear regression, energy balance model that accounts for the natural influences on global mean surface temperature due to ENSO, the 11-year solar cycle, major volcanic eruptions, as well as the anthropogenic influence of greenhouse gases and aerosols and the efficiency of ocean heat uptake. First, we will analyze the human contribution of global warming from 1975-2014 based on the climate record, also known as the attributable anthropogenic warming rate (AAWR). We will compare the values of AAWR found using the EM-GC with values of AAWR from the CMIP6 multi-model ensemble. Preliminary analysis indicates that over the past three decades, the human component of global warming inferred from the CMIP6 GCMs is larger than the human component of warming from the climate record. Second, we will compare values of equilibrium climate sensitivity inferred from the historical climate record to those determined from CMIP6 GCMs using the Gregory et al., GRL, 2004 method. Third, we will use the future abundances of greenhouse gases and aerosols provided by the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) to project future global mean surface temperature change. We will compare the projections of future temperature anomalies from CMIP6 GCMs to those determined by the EM-GC. We will conclude by assessing the probability of the CMIP6 and EM-GC projections of achieving the Paris Agreement target (1.5°C) and upper limit (2.0°C) for several of the SSP scenarios.

How to cite: McBride, L., Hope, A., Canty, T., Tribett, W., Bennett, B., and Salawitch, R.: Simulation and Projection of Global Mean Surface Temperature Using the Empirical Model of Global Climate and Comparison to CMIP6 GCMs, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6491, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6491, 2021.

EGU21-13697 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Probabilistic climate projections with Minimal CMIP Emulator (MCE)

Junichi Tsutsui

One of the key applications of simple climate models is probabilistic climate projections to assess a variety of emission scenarios in terms of their compatibility with global warming mitigation goals. The second phase of the Reduced Complexity Model Intercomparison Project (RCMIP) compares nine participating models for their probabilistic projection methods through scenario experiments, focusing on consistency with given constraints for climate indicators including radiative forcing, carbon budget, warming trends, and climate sensitivity. The MCE is one of the nine models, recently developed by the author, and has produced results that well match the ranges of the constraints. The model is based on impulse response functions and parameterized physics of effective radiative forcing and carbon uptake over ocean and land. Perturbed model parameters are generated from statistical models and constrained with a Metropolis-Hastings independence sampler. A parameter subset associated with CO2-induced warming is assured to have a covariance structure as diagnosed from complex climate models of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP). The model's simplicity and the successful results imply that a method with less complicated structures and fewer control parameters has an advantage when building reasonable perturbed ensembles in a transparent way despite less capacity to emulate detailed Earth system components. Experimental results for future scenarios show that the climate sensitivity of CMIP models is overestimated overall, suggesting that probabilistic climate projections need to be constrained with observed warming trends.

How to cite: Tsutsui, J.: Probabilistic climate projections with Minimal CMIP Emulator (MCE), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13697, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13697, 2021.

The Simple Climate Model for Optimization version 2.0 (SCM4OPT v2.0) is one of the contributors to the Reduced Complexity Model Intercomparison Project Phase 2 (RCMIP2). However, low effective radiative forcing is emulated in SCM4OPT v2.0, which is driven by the strong negative aerosol effective radiative forcing and considered to be an outlier compared to other models. In addition, the carbon cycles and climate system in SCM4OPT v2.0 are calibrated based on the outputs from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5), which cannot reflect the latest Earth system model results. In this study, we update the reduced-complexity model to SCM4OPT v3.0. First, we re-calibrate the carbon cycles, including land carbon-cycle and ocean carbon-cycle, and the climate system according to 32 coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (AOGCMs) with selected experimental outputs in the latest CMIP6; Second, we fix the aerosol forcing by introducing a constrain in the light of the IPCC AR5 aerosol forcing. We retain the lightweight and efficient nature of this model, in order to make it suitable to be involved in a large-scale optimization process. Using SCM4OPT v3.0, we produce a new set of scenario simulations by using the dataset of harmonized emissions used in CMIP6 and compare with other reduced-complexity models. SCM4OPT v3.0 is expected to simulate climate-related uncertainties regarding the latest understanding of climate change.

How to cite: Su, X.: Develop a reduced-complexity model – SCM4OPT v3.0 for integrated assessment-optimization, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14657, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14657, 2021.

EGU21-12229 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Global and Regional Temperature Projections Using the Fractional Energy Balance Equation

Roman Procyk, Shaun Lovejoy, Raphaël Hébert, and Lenin Del Rio Amador

We present the Fractional Energy Balance Equation (FEBE): a generalization of the standard EBE.  The key FEBE novelty is the assumption of a hierarchy of energy storage mechanisms: scaling energy storage.  Mathematically the storage term is of fractional rather than integer order.  The special half-order case (HEBE) can be classically derived from the continuum mechanics heat equation used by Budyko and Sellers simply by introducing a vertical coordinate and using the correct conductive-radiative surface boundary conditions (the FEBE is a mild extension).

We use the FEBE to determine the temperature response to both historical forcings and to future scenarios.  Using historical data, we estimate the 2 FEBE parameters: its scaling exponent (H = 0.38±0.05; H = 1 is the standard EBE) and relaxation time (4.7±2.3 years, comparable to box model relaxation times). We also introduce two forcing parameters: an aerosol re-calibration factor, to account for their large uncertainty, and a volcanic intermittency exponent so that the intermittency volcanic signal can be linearly related to the temperature. The high frequency FEBE regime not only allows for modelling responses to volcanic forcings but also the response to internal white noise forcings: a theoretically motivated error model (approximated by a fractional Gaussian noise). The low frequency part uses historical data and long memory for climate projections, constraining both equilibrium climate sensitivity and historical aerosol forcings. Parameters are estimated in a Bayesian framework using 5 global observational temperature series, and an error model which is a theoretical consequence of the FEBE forced by a Gaussian white noise.

Using the CMIP5 Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) and CMIP6 Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) scenario, the FEBE projections to 2100 are shown alongside the CMIP5 MME. The Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity = 2.0±0.4 oC/CO2 doubling implies slightly lower temperature increases.   However, the FEBE’s 90% confidence intervals are about half the CMIP5 size so that the new projections lie within the corresponding CMIP5 MME uncertainties so that both approaches fully agree.   The mutually agreement of qualitatively different approaches, gives strong support to both.  We also compare both generations of General Circulation Models (GCMs) outputs from CMIP5/6 alongside with the projections produced by the FEBE model which are entirely independent from GCMs, contributing to our understanding of forced climate variability in the past, present and future.

Following the same methodology, we apply the FEBE to regional scales: estimating model and forcing parameters to produce climate projections at 2.5ox2.5o resolutions. We compare the spatial patterns of climate sensitivity and projected warming between the FEBE and CMIP5/6 GCMs. 

How to cite: Procyk, R., Lovejoy, S., Hébert, R., and Del Rio Amador, L.: Global and Regional Temperature Projections Using the Fractional Energy Balance Equation, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12229, 2021.

EGU21-12121 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

On Generalized Langevin Dynamics and the Modelling of Global Mean Temperature

Nicholas Wynn Watkins, Sandra Catherine Chapman, Aleksei Chechkin, Ian Ford, Rainer Klages, and David Stainforth

Since Hasselmann and Leith, stochastic Energy Balance Models (EBMs) have allowed treatment of climate fluctuations, and at least the possibility of fluctuation-dissipation relations.   However, it has recently been argued that observations motivate heavy-tailed temporal response functions in global mean temperature. Our complementary approach  (arXiv:2007.06464v2[cond-mat.stat-mech]) exploits the correspondence  between Hasselmann’s EBM and  Langevin’s equation (1908).  We propose mapping the Mori-Kubo Generalised Langevin Equation (GLE) to generalise the Hasselmann EBM. If present, long range memory then simplifies the GLE to a fractional Langevin equation (FLE).  We describe the EBMs that correspond to the GLE and FLE,  and relate them to  Lovejoy et al’s FEBE [NPG Discussions, 2019; QJRMS, to appear, 2021].

How to cite: Watkins, N. W., Chapman, S. C., Chechkin, A., Ford, I., Klages, R., and Stainforth, D.: On Generalized Langevin Dynamics and the Modelling of Global Mean Temperature, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12121, 2021.

EGU21-15630 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Showcasing the compact Earth system model OSCAR v3.1 with CMIP6 simulations

Yann Quilcaille and Thomas Gasser

While Earth system models (ESM) provide spatially detailed process-based outputs, they present heavy computational costs. Reduced complexity models such as OSCAR are calibrated on those complex models and provide an alternative with faster calculations but lower resolutions. Yet, reduced-complexity models need to be evaluated and validated. We diagnose the newest version of OSCAR (v3.1) using observations and results from ESMs and the current Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6. A total of 99 experiments are selected for simulation with OSCAR v3.1 in a probabilistic framework, reaching a total of 567,700,000 simulated years. Here, we showcase these results. A first highlight of this exercise is the unstability of the model for high-warming scenarios, which we attribute to the ocean carbon cycle module. The diverging runs caused by this unstability were discarded in the post-processing. The ensuing main results were further obtained by weighting each physical parametrizations based on their performance to replicate a set of observations. Overall, OSCAR v3.1 qualitively behaves like complex ESMs, for all aspects of the Earth system, although we observe a number of quantitative differences with state-of-the-art models. Some specific features of OSCAR contribute in these differences, such as its fully interactive atmospheric chemistry and endogenous calculations of biomass burning, wetlands and permafrost emissions. Nevertheless, the low sensitivity of the land carbon cycle to climate change, the unstability of the ocean carbon cycle, the seemingly over-constrained climate module, and the strong climate feedback over short-lived species, all call for an improvement of these aspects in OSCAR. Beyond providing a key diagnosis of the model in the context of the reduced-complexity models intercomparison project (RCMIP), this work is also meant to help with the upcoming calibration of OSCAR on CMIP6 results, and to provide a large set of CMIP6 simulations all run consistently with a probalistic model.

How to cite: Quilcaille, Y. and Gasser, T.: Showcasing the compact Earth system model OSCAR v3.1 with CMIP6 simulations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15630, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15630, 2021.

Projecting the global climate feedback and surface warming responses to anthropogenic forcing scenarios remains a key priority for climate science. Here, we explore possible roles for efficient climate model ensembles in contributing to quantitative projections of future global mean surface warming and climate feedback within model hierarchies. By comparing complex and efficient (sometimes termed ‘simple’) model output to data we: (1) explore potential Bayesian approaches to model ensemble generation; (2) ask what properties an efficient climate model should have to contribute to the generation of future warming and climate feedback projections; (3) present new projections from efficient model ensembles.

 

Climate processes relevant to global surface warming and climate feedback act over at least 14 orders of magnitude in space and time; from cloud droplet collisions and photosynthesis up to the global mean temperature and carbon storage over the 21st century. Due to computational resources, even the most complex Earth system models only resolve around 3 orders of magnitude in horizontal space (from grid scale up to global scale) and 6 orders of magnitude in time (from a single timestep up to a century).

 

Complex Earth system models must therefore contain a great many parameterisations (including specified functional forms of equations and their coefficient values) representing sub grid-scale and sub time-scale processes. We know that these parameterisations affect the quantitative model projections, because different complex models produce a range of historic and future projections. However, complex Earth system models are too computationally expensive to fully sample the plausible combinations of their own parameterisations, typically being able to realise only several tens of simulations.

 

In contrast, efficient climate models are able to utilise computational resources to resolve their own plausible combinations of parameterisations, through the construction of very large model ensembles. However, this parameterisation resolution occurs at the expense of a much-reduced resolution of relevant climate processes. Since the relative simplicity of efficient model representations may not capture the required complexity of the climate system, the qualitative nature of their simulated projections may be too simplistic. For example, an efficient climate model may use a single climate feedback value for all time and for all sources of radiative forcing, when in complex models (and the real climate system) climate feedbacks may vary over time and may respond differently to, say, localised aerosol forcing than to well mixed greenhouse gases.

 

By far the dominant quantitative projections of global mean surface warming in the scientific literature, as used in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Assessment Reports, derive from relatively small ensembles of complex climate model output. However, computational resources impose an inherent trade-off between model resolution of relevant climate processes (affecting the qualitative nature of the model framework) and model ensemble resolution of plausible parameterisations (affecting the quantitative exploration of projections within that model framework). This computationally imposed trade-off suggests there may be a significant role for efficient model output, within a hierarchy of model complexities, when generating future warming projections.

How to cite: Goodwin, P. and Cael, B. B.: The role of efficient climate models in the projection of future climate feedback and surface warming, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-852, 2021.

EGU21-8142 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Revisiting the variation of the climate feedback parameter

Diego Jiménez-de-la-Cuesta

Observations and models indicate a varying radiative response of the Earth system to CO2 forcing. This variation introduces large uncertainties in the climate sensitivity estimates to increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration. This variation is represented as an additional feedback mechanism in energy-balance models, which depends on more than only the surface temperature change. Models and observations also indicate that a spatio-temporal pattern in the surface warming controls this additional contribution to the radiative response. However, several authors picture this effect as a feedback change in the atmosphere, reducing the role of the ocean's enthalpy-uptake variations. I use a widely-known linearised conceptual energy-balance model and its analytical solutions to find an explicit expression of the radiative response and its temporal evolution. This explicit expression provides another timescale in the Earth system, as the ocean-atmosphere coupling modulates the radiative response. Thus, to understand the variation of the climate feedback parameter, we need not only to know its relation to the spatio-temporal warming pattern but an improved picture of the ocean-atmosphere coupling that generates the pattern.

How to cite: Jiménez-de-la-Cuesta, D.: Revisiting the variation of the climate feedback parameter, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8142, 2021.

EGU21-12704 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

SPAGETTA Weather Generator Linked with Climate Models May Produce Weather Series for Future Climate 

Martin Dubrovsky, Ondrej Lhotka, Jiri Miksovsky, Petr Stepanek, and Jan Meitner

Stochastic weather generators (WGs) are tools for producing weather series, which are statistically similar to the real world weather series. The synthetic series may represent both present and changed (not only the future) climate. In the latter case, WG parameters derived from the observed weather series are modified with climate change scenario, which is typically based on RCM or GCM simulations. As the GCM/RCM simulations are very demanding on computer resources, the numbers of simulations made for individual possible emission scenarios are limited, especially for some (mostly the less probable ones) emission scenarios (e.g. RCP 2.6). Still, many climate change impact studies try to give projections of the CC impacts assuming uncertainties coming from all possible sources, including the modeling uncertainty and  uncertainties in emissions & climate sensitivity. To allow generation of weather series fitting the projection of any GCM forced by any emission scenario, we use a pattern scaling approach, in which the standardized climate change scenario (consisting of changes in climatic characteristic related to 1ºC change in global mean temperature) derived from a given GCM is multiplied by a change in global mean temperature (dTg) projected (for a selected emission scenario and climate sensitivity) by a simple climate model MAGICC.

In our contribution, we will demonstrate the use of the generator (using SPAGETTA WG, which is our multi-site multi-variate parametric daily WG) in probabilistic projection of future changes in selected climatic characteristics of temperature (T) and precipitation (P); we will focus on spatial hot/cold/dry/wet/hot-dry/hot-wet/cold-dry/cold-wet spells). Standardized climate change scenarios will be derived from multiple GCMs (taken from CMIP5 database) and scaled by dTg projected by MAGICC. Effects of the three above-named sources of uncertainty, as well as the effects of changes in individual statistical characteristics (the means & the site-specific variabilities & the characteristics of the temporal and spatial variability of both T and P) will be assessed.

Acknowledgements: Projects GRIMASA (Czech Science Foundation, project no. 18-15958S) and SustES (European Structural and Investment Funds, project no. CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000797).

How to cite: Dubrovsky, M., Lhotka, O., Miksovsky, J., Stepanek, P., and Meitner, J.: SPAGETTA Weather Generator Linked with Climate Models May Produce Weather Series for Future Climate , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12704, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12704, 2021.

EGU21-1091 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

qgs: A flexible Python framework of reduced-order multiscale climate models

Lesley De Cruz, Jonathan Demaeyer, and Stéphane Vannitsem

In atmospheric and climate sciences, research and development is often first conducted with a simple idealized system like the Lorenz-N models (N ∈ {63, 84, 96}) which are toy models of atmospheric variability. On the other hand, reduced-order spectral quasi-geostrophic models of the atmosphere with a sufficient number of modes offer a good representation of the dry atmospheric dynamics. They allow one to identify typical features of the atmospheric circulation, such as blocked and zonal circulation regimes, and low-frequency variability. However, these models are less often considered in literature, despite their demonstration of more realistic behavior.

qgs (Demaeyer et al., 2020) aims to popularize these systems by providing a fast and easy-to-use Python framework for researchers and teachers to integrate this kind of model. The documentation makes it clear and efficient to handle the model, by explaining the equations and parameters and linking these to the code. 

The choice to use Python was specifically made to facilitate its use in Jupyter Notebooks and with the multiple recent machine learning libraries that are available in this language.

In this talk, we will present the modeling capabilities of qgs and show its usage in a varieties of didactical and research use cases.

Reference

Demaeyer, J., De Cruz, L., & Vannitsem, S. (2020). qgs: A flexible Python framework of reduced-order multiscale climate models. Journal of Open Source Software, 5(56), 2597, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.02597 .

How to cite: De Cruz, L., Demaeyer, J., and Vannitsem, S.: qgs: A flexible Python framework of reduced-order multiscale climate models, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1091, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1091, 2021.

EGU21-1328 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Parameterization dependence of the hydrological cycle in a general circulation model of intermediate complexity

Oliver Mehling, Elisa Ziegler, Heather Andres, Martin Werner, and Kira Rehfeld

The global hydrological cycle is of crucial importance for life on Earth. Hence, it is a focus of both future climate projections and paleoclimate modeling. The latter typically requires long integrations or large ensembles of simulations, and therefore models of reduced complexity are needed to reduce the computational cost. Here, we study the hydrological cycle of the the Planet Simulator (PlaSim) [1], a general circulation model (GCM) of intermediate complexity, which includes evaporation, precipitation, soil hydrology, and river advection.

Using published parameter configurations for T21 resolution [2, 3], PlaSim strongly underestimates precipitation in the mid-latitudes as well as global atmospheric water compared to ERA5 reanalysis data [4]. However, the tuning of PlaSim has been limited to optimizing atmospheric temperatures and net radiative fluxes so far [3].

Here, we present a different approach by tuning the model’s atmospheric energy balance and water budget simultaneously. We argue for the use of the globally averaged mean absolute error (MAE) for 2 m temperature, net radiation, and evaporation in the objective function. To select relevant model parameters, especially with respect to radiation and the hydrological cycle, we perform a sensitivity analysis and evaluate the feature importance using a Random Forest regressor. An optimal set of parameters is obtained via Bayesian optimization.

Using the optimized set of parameters, the mean absolute error of temperature and cloud cover is reduced on most model levels, and mid-latitude precipitation patterns are improved. In addition to annual zonal-mean patterns, we examine the agreement with the seasonal cycle and discuss regions in which the bias remains considerable, such as the monsoon region over the Pacific.

We discuss the robustness of this tuning with regards to resolution (T21, T31, and T42), and compare the atmosphere-only results to simulations with a mixed-layer ocean. Finally, we provide an outlook on the applicability of our parametrization to climate states other than present-day conditions.

[1] K. Fraedrich et al., Meteorol. Z. 14, 299–304 (2005)
[2] F. Lunkeit et al., Planet Simulator User’s Guide Version 16.0 (University of Hamburg, 2016)
[3] G. Lyu et al., J. Adv. Model. Earth Syst. 10, 207–222 (2018)
[4] H. Hersbach et al., Q. J. R. Meteorol. Soc. 146, 1999–2049 (2020)

How to cite: Mehling, O., Ziegler, E., Andres, H., Werner, M., and Rehfeld, K.: Parameterization dependence of the hydrological cycle in a general circulation model of intermediate complexity, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1328, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1328, 2021.

EGU21-13072 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

New applications for an EMIC coupled to an atmospheric chemistry model - The University of Victoria Earth system climate model version 2.10 + FAIR chemistry module

Alexander J. MacIsaac, Nadine Mengis, Kirsten Zickfeld, and Claude-Michel Nzotungicimpaye

As an Earth system model of intermediate complexity (EMIC), the University of Victoria Earth system climate model (UVic-ESCM) has a comparably low computational cost (4.5–11.5 h per 100 years on a simple desktop computer). It is therefore a well-suited tool to perform experiments that are not yet computationally feasible in a state-of-the-art Earth system model. For example, the UVic-ESCM can be used to perform large perturbed parameter ensembles to constrain uncertainties, but also run a multitude of scenarios while at the same time simulating a well resolved carbon cycle. Thanks to its representation of many important components of the carbon cycle and the physical climate and its ability to simulate dynamic interactions between them, the UVic-ESCM is additionally a more comprehensive tool for process level uncertainty assessment compared to integrated assessment models (IAMs).

The coupling of this EMIC with an atmospheric chemistry module based on the FAIR simple climate model, now allows to directly implement GHG emission files as an input to the model, which makes it a valuable tool for many ‘what-if’ questions about climate turnaround times. Especially in the context of assessing the carbon cycle responses to future long-term climate change scenarios including e.g. marine CDR or terrestrial CDR implementations. In this presentation we will introduce this new model setup and show examples of first applications of this novel tool, while showcasing the advantages that it brings about. 

How to cite: MacIsaac, A. J., Mengis, N., Zickfeld, K., and Nzotungicimpaye, C.-M.: New applications for an EMIC coupled to an atmospheric chemistry model - The University of Victoria Earth system climate model version 2.10 + FAIR chemistry module, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13072, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13072, 2021.

EGU21-8700 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Coastal carbon transfer in the past - a box model study

Anne Kruijt, Jack Middelburg, and Appy Sluijs

The shelf represents a relatively small fraction of global oceanic area but plays an important role in the global carbon cycle because of high production and burial of organic matter and calcium carbonate. Biological processes on the shelf can greatly alter the partial pressure of dissolved CO2, causing disequilibrium with the atmosphere and fluxes significantly larger than those in the open ocean. Also the transport of major ions from land to open ocean is mediated by shelf processes. Available models resolving the governing processes are typically designed to simulate specific regions. Global carbon cycle models typically implement all shelf processes in one simple box. Global earth system models typically impose a flux of riverine export products from land directly into the open ocean without accounting for processes in the coastal zone. However, the global role of the coastal zone in the carbon cycle on various time scales remains poorly quantified, partly due to the large variability in continental margin environments, hampering proper understanding of past, present and future global carbon cycle dynamics.
We develop a new coastal zone model that links river biogeochemistry with open ocean models, focusing on the transfer of carbon. Our first approach represents a box model in which number, size and depth of boxes can be varied. We apply global fluxes of carbon into the system and include functions describing first order organic and inorganic carbon processes in each of the boxes. With this conceptual model of the coastal zone we aim to test the effect of changes in bathymetry, temperature and light attenuation on the way carbon is transferred through the coastal interface, suitable for paleo and future applications.

How to cite: Kruijt, A., Middelburg, J., and Sluijs, A.: Coastal carbon transfer in the past - a box model study, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8700, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8700, 2021.

EGU21-8960 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Effect of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation on atmospheric pCO2

Daan Boot and Henk Dijkstra

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) plays an important role in regulating the climate of the Northern Hemisphere. Several studies have shown that the AMOC can be in two stable states under equal forcing. This bistability, and associated tipping behavior, has been suggested as a mechanism for climate transitions in the past such as the Dansgaard-Oescher events. The relationship between AMOC variability and that in atmospheric pCO2 concentration is still unclear since different studies provide  contradictory results. Here, we investigate this  relationship using the Simple Carbon Project Model v1.0 (SCP-M), which we extended to represent a suite of nonlinear  carbon cycle feedbacks. By implementing SCP-M in the continuation and bifurcation software AUTO-07p, we can efficiently explore the multi-dimensional parameter space to address the AMOC - pCO2 relationship while varying the strengths of the carbon cycle feedbacks. We do not find multiple equilibria in the carbon-cycle dynamics, with fixed AMOC, but there are  intrinsic oscillations due to Hopf bifurcations with multi-millennial periods. The mechanisms of  this variability,  related to biological production and to calcium carbonate compensation, will be presented and their relevance  is addressed. 

How to cite: Boot, D. and Dijkstra, H.: Effect of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation on atmospheric pCO2, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8960, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8960, 2021.

EGU21-10395 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

Tracking carbon flows through the biosphere: a new capability for the simple climate model Hector

Skylar Gering, Benjamin Bond-Lamberty, and Dawn Woodard

Simple climate models focusing on the global climate and carbon cycle are valuable tools for large-ensemble sensitivity studies, model coupling experiments, and policy analyses. One example is Hector, an open-source model with multiple biomes, ocean chemistry, and a novel permafrost implementation. However, Hector does not currently have the capability to reconstruct the flow of carbon from one carbon pool (e.g., atmosphere and ocean) to another or report, at the end of a model run, the origin of the carbon within each pool. We developed a novel ‘trackedval’ C++ class and integrated it into Hector’s codebase. In addition to keeping track of a pool’s total carbon, the trackedval class also records the origin pools of the carbon, determined at the start of a run. If carbon tracking is enabled, this record is updated every timestep to reflect carbon fluxes (pool-to-pool transfers). To demonstrate this capability, we reconstruct and visualize the movement of carbon for several example model runs. Hector is the only simple climate model that we are aware of with the ability to reconstruct the carbon-cycle in detail through carbon tracking. The addition of the trackedval class to Hector opens up opportunities for deeper exploration of the effects of climate change on the global carbon cycle and can be used to track carbon isotopes or other elements in the future.

How to cite: Gering, S., Bond-Lamberty, B., and Woodard, D.: Tracking carbon flows through the biosphere: a new capability for the simple climate model Hector, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10395, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10395, 2021.

EGU21-15363 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1

A Bayesian-inferred physical module to estimate robust mitigation pathways with cost-benefit IAMs

Thomas Gasser, Artem Baklanov, Armon Rezai, Côme Chéritel, and Michael Obersteiner

Cost-benefit integrated assessment models (IAMs) include a simplified representation of both the anthropogenic and natural components of the Earth system, and of the interactions and feedbacks between them. As such, they embed economic- and physics-based equations, and the uncertainty in one domain will inevitably affect the other. Most often, however, the physical uncertainty is explored by testing the sensitivity of the optimal mitigation pathway to a few key physical parameters; but for robust decision-making, the optimal pathway itself should ideally embed the uncertainty.

Here, we present a new physical module for cost-benefit IAMs that is based on state-of-the-art climate sciences. The module follows well-established formulations that were deemed a good trade-off between simplicity and accuracy. Therefore, its overall complexity remains low, as is necessary to be used with optimisation algorithms, but able to reproduce the behaviour of more complex CMIP models. It is made of four components that all exhibit a degree of non-linearity: global climate response, ocean carbon cycle, land carbon cycle, and permafrost carbon system. (Two impact components were also developed: surface ocean acidification, and sea-level rise response.)

The calibration of this new module is done through Bayesian inference. Prior distributions of the module’s parameters are taken from CMIP multi-model ensembles, and prior distributions of historical constraints are taken from observational datasets (such as global mean surface temperature) and other synthesis exercises (such as IPCC reports or the global carbon budget). The Bayesian calibration itself is done with a full-rank automatic differentiation variational inference (ADVI) algorithm, which leads to posterior distributions of parameters that are consistent with observations. Additionally, the full-rank ADVI algorithm also finds correlations between parameters (i.e. co-distributions) that tend to further reduce the uncertainty in projected climate change.

We then implement this new module within the DICE model (that is likely the most widely used cost-benefit IAM), and we demonstrate a significant improvement of the physical modelling, and thus of the IAM’s results. We run a Monte Carlo ensemble of 4000 elements taken from the Bayesian calibration, to properly sample the physical uncertainty in the optimal mitigation pathway simulated by DICE. Notably, our new module leads to a social cost of carbon (SCC) of 26 USD / tCO2 (90% range: 13–43), which is lower than 37 USD / tCO2 in the original model.

This Monte Carlo approach is not a robust one, however, and a final simulation is run to estimate one unique mitigation pathway shared across all 4000 states of the world (by maximizing the total welfare). This robust mitigation pathway is therefore a unique solution that embeds the physical uncertainty, and it is different from the average pathway of the Monte Carlo ensemble. The unicity of the solution (and its lack of explicit uncertainty) makes it very attractive for decision-making and communication purposes. We posit this robust approach could be applied with the cost-optimal IAMs that are used by the IPCC to create and investigate climate change scenarios.

How to cite: Gasser, T., Baklanov, A., Rezai, A., Chéritel, C., and Obersteiner, M.: A Bayesian-inferred physical module to estimate robust mitigation pathways with cost-benefit IAMs, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15363, 2021.

EGU21-7334 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.1 | Highlight

Public Outreach and Interactive Learning with En-ROADS Global Energy and Climate Simulator

Sibel Eker, Lori Siegel, Charles Jones, John Sterman, Florian Kapmeier, Tom Fiddaman, Jack Homer, Juliette Rooney-Varga, Travis Franck, and Andrew Jones

Simple climate models enable not only rapid simulation of a large number of climate scenarios, especially in connection with the integrated assessment models of economy and environment, but also provide chances for outreach and education. En-ROADS, (Energy Rapid Overview and Decision Support)[1], is a publicly available, online policy simulation model designed to complement integrated assessment models for rapid simulation of climate solutions. En-ROADS is a globally aggregated energy-economy-climate model based on a simple climate model, and supports outreach and education about the causes and effects of climate change.  It has an intuitive user interface and runs essentially instantly on ordinary laptops and tablets, providing policymakers, other leaders, educators, and the public with the ability to learn for themselves about the likely consequences of energy and climate policies and uncertainties.

 

En-ROADS is a behavioral system dynamics model consisting of a system of nonlinear ordinary differential equations solved numerically from 1990-2100, with a time step of one-eighth year. En-ROADS extends the C-ROADS model, which has been used extensively by officials and policymakers around the world to inform positions of parties to the UNFCCC[2][3]. In En-ROADS’ climate module, the resulting emissions from the energy system, from forestry and land use, and carbon removal technologies, determine the atmospheric concentrations of each GHG, radiative forcing, and climate impacts including global surface temperature anomaly, heat and carbon transfer between the surface and deep ocean, sea level rise, and ocean acidification. It is calibrated to fit historical data of temperature change and carbon cycle elements, as well as the projections within the RCP-SSP framework. Both En-ROADS and C-ROADS are further developed to account for the details of the terrestrial carbon cycle.

 

 

 

 


[1] https://en-roads.climateinteractive.org/scenario.html.

[2] Sterman J, Fiddaman T, Franck TR, Jones A, McCauley S, Rice P, et al. Climate interactive: the C-ROADS climate policy model. System Dynamics Review 2013 28 (3): 295–305

[3] Sterman JD, Fiddaman T, Franck T, Jones A, McCauley S, Rice P, et al. Management flight simulators to support climate negotiations. Environmental Modelling & Software 2013, 44: 122-135.

How to cite: Eker, S., Siegel, L., Jones, C., Sterman, J., Kapmeier, F., Fiddaman, T., Homer, J., Rooney-Varga, J., Franck, T., and Jones, A.: Public Outreach and Interactive Learning with En-ROADS Global Energy and Climate Simulator, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7334, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7334, 2021.

CL5.2.4 – The added value of downscaling

EGU21-13931 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

STAR-ESDM: A New Bias Correction Method for High-Resolution Station- and Grid-Based Climate Projections

Katharine Hayhoe, Anne Marie Stoner, Ian Scott-Fleming, and Hamed Ibrahim

The Seasonal Trends and Analysis of Residuals (STAR) Empirical-Statistical Downscaling Model (ESDM) is a new bias correction and downscaling method that employs a signal processing approach to decompose observed and model-simulated temperature and precipitation into long-term trends, static and dynamic annual climatologies, and day-to-day variability. It then individually bias-corrects each signal, using a nonparametric Kernel Density Estimation function for the daily anomalies, before reassembling into a coherent time series.

Comparing the performance of this method in bias-correcting daily temperature and precipitation relative to 25km high-resolution dynamical global model simulations shows significant improvement over commonly-used ESDMs in North America for high and low quantiles of the distribution and overall minimal bias acceptable for all but the most extreme precipitation amounts (beyond the 99.9th quantile of wet days) and for temperature at very high elevations during peak historical snowmelt months.

STAR-ESDM is a MATLAB-based code that minimizes computational demand to enable rapid bias-correction and spatial downscaling of multiple datasets. Here, we describe new CMIP5 and CMIP6-based datasets of daily maximum and minimum temperature and daily precipitation for nearly 10,000 weather stations across North and Central America, as well as gridded datasets for the contiguous U.S., Canada, and globally. In 2022, we plan to extend the station-based downscaling globally as well, since point-source projections can be of use in assessment of climate impacts in many fields, from urban health to water supply.

The projections have furthermore been translated into a series of impact-relevant indicators at the seasonal,  monthly, and daily scale including multi-day heat waves, extreme precipitation events, threshold exceedences, and cumulative degree-days for individual RCP/ssp scenarios as well as by global mean temperature thresholds as described in Hayhoe et al. (2018; U.S. Fourth National Climate Assessment Volume 1 Chapter 4).

In this presentation we describe the methodology, briefly highlight results from the evaluation and comparison analysis, and summarize available and forthcoming projections using this computational framework.

How to cite: Hayhoe, K., Stoner, A. M., Scott-Fleming, I., and Ibrahim, H.: STAR-ESDM: A New Bias Correction Method for High-Resolution Station- and Grid-Based Climate Projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13931, 2021.

EGU21-1224 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4 | Highlight

Empirical statistical downscaling with EPISODES in Austria

Theresa Schellander-Gorgas, Frank Kreienkamp, Philip Lorenz, Christoph Matulla, and Janos Tordai

EPISODES is an empirical statistical downscaling (ESD) method, which has been initiated and developed by the German Weather Service (DWD). Having resulted in good evaluation scores for Germany, the methodology it is also set-up and adapted for Austria at ZAMG and, hence, for an alpine territory with complex topography.

ESD methods are sparing regarding computational costs compared to dynamical downscaling models. Due to this advantage ESD can be applied in a short time frame and in a demand-based manner. It enables, e.g., processing ensembles of downscaled climate projections, which can be assessed either as stand-alone data set or to enhance ensembles based on dynamical methods. This helps improve the robustness of climatological statements for the purpose of climate impact research.

Preconditions for achieving high-quality results by EPISODES are long-term, temporally consistent observation data sets and a best possible realistic reproduction of relevant large-scale weather conditions by the GCMs. Given these requirements, EPISODES produces high-quality multivariate and spatially/temporally consistent synthetic time series on regular grids or station locations. The output is provided for daily time steps and, at maximum, for the resolution of underlying observation data.

The EPISODES method consists on mainly two steps: At first stage, univariate time series are produced on a coarse grid based on the analogue method and linear regression. It means that coarse scale atmospheric conditions of each single day as described by the GCM projections are assigned to a selection of at most similar daily weather situations of the observed past. From this selection new values are determined by linear regression for each day.

The second stage of the EPISODES method works like a weather generator. Short-term anomalies based on first stage results, on the one hand, and on observations, on the other hand, are matched selecting the most similar day for all used meteorological parameters and coarse grid points at the same time. Together with the high-resolution climatological background of observations and the climatological shift as described by GCM projections the short-term variability are combined to synthetic daily values for each target grid point. This approach provides the desired characteristics of the downscaled climate projections such as multivariability and spatio-temporal consistency.

Recent EPISODES evaluation results for daily precipitation and daily mean temperature are presented for the Austrian federal territory. Performance of the EPISODES ensemble will also be discussed in relation to existing ensembles based on dynamical methods which have already been widely used in climate impact studies in Austria: EURO-CORDEX and ÖKS15.

How to cite: Schellander-Gorgas, T., Kreienkamp, F., Lorenz, P., Matulla, C., and Tordai, J.: Empirical statistical downscaling with EPISODES in Austria, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1224, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1224, 2021.

EGU21-1574 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

Weather regimes and analogues downscaling of seasonal precipitation for the 21st century; A case study over Israel

Dorita Rostkier-Edelstein, Assaf Hochman, Pavel Kunin, Pinhas Alpert, Tzvi Harpaz, and Hadas Saaroni

Careful planning of the use of water resources is critical in the semi-arid eastern Mediterranean region. The relevant areas are characterized by complex terrain and coastlines, and exhibit large spatial variability in seasonal precipitation. Global climate models provide only partial information on local‐scale phenomenon, such as precipitation, primarily due to their coarse resolution. In this study, statistical downscaling algorithms, based on both synoptic scale past weather regimes and  analogues and their associated observed precipitation at rain gauges, are operated for eighteen Israeli rain gauges in four hydrological basins with an altitude ranging between ‐200 and ~1000 m ASL. In order to project seasonal precipitation over Israel and its hydrologic basins, the algorithms are applied to six Coupled Model Inter‐comparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) models for the end of the 21st century, according to the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios. The downscaled models are able to capture quite well the seasonal precipitation distribution. All models display a significant reduction of seasonal precipitation for the 21st century of up to ~50% with variations depending on the scenario, algorithm and hydrological basin. The reduction is less acute when applying the weather regimes algorithm as it relies on past  daily mean precipitation values per regime, while the analogues downscaling algorithm relies on the daily precipitation of the individual past analogues and therefore better captures the tails of the distribution. Moreover, the analogues downscaling algorithm projects a significant increase of outliers in the right tale of the distribution i.e. increase in extreme precipitation events. The reduction in seasonal precipitaton is due to both decrease in the frequency of the synoptic systems responsible for precipitation as well as reduction in the daily precipitation amounts at the stations. While the percentage of reduction is quite similar among stations (same reduction in the precipitating synoptic systems that affect the whole area), the reduced amounts are different as they are characterized by different seasonal precipitation amounts. In some cases reductions in precipitation can lead to transition of some areas to semi-arid and arid climates. The statistical downscaling methods applied in this study can be easily transferred to other regions where long‐term datasets of observed precipitation are available.

How to cite: Rostkier-Edelstein, D., Hochman, A., Kunin, P., Alpert, P., Harpaz, T., and Saaroni, H.: Weather regimes and analogues downscaling of seasonal precipitation for the 21st century; A case study over Israel, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1574, 2021.

General Circulation Models (GCMs) are the primary source of knowledge for constructing climate scenarios and provide the basis for quantifying the climate change impacts at multi-scales and from local to global. However, the climate model simulations have a lower resolution than the desired watershed or hydrologic scale. Different downscaling methodologies are adopted to transform the global scale (coarser resolution) climate information to the local scale (finer resolution). One of the drawbacks of the GCM simulations is the systematic bias relative to historical observations. Bias correction is thus required to adjust the simulated values to reflect the observed distribution and statistics. In this study, the effect of bias correction is evaluated on the statistical downscaling models' performance to predict the temperature. Three statistical downscaling models are used: (i) Multi-linear Regression (MLR); (ii) Generalized Regression Neural Network (GRNN); and (iii) Cascade Neural Network (CasNN). The average daily temperature simulations generated by 25 GCMs of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase-5 (CMIP5) are used in the study. The analysis is carried out at 22 stations of the Upper Thames River Basin (UTRB) in Canada during the baseline period of 1950 to 2005. The downscaling models' performance is evaluated using the Pearson Correlation Coefficient (CC) and Nash Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE). The results indicated that bias correction had improved all the downscaling models' performance at all stations of UTRB. The respective increase in CC and NSE values for (i) MLR is 8% and 10%; (ii) GRNN is 4% and 7%; and (iii) CasNN is 4% and 8%. Among the three downscaling models, multi-linear regression and cascade neural network models have shown similar performance.

How to cite: Wagh, P. and Srivastav, R.: Statistical Downscaling of Temperature Using Global Climate Model Outputs - Effect of Bias correction, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7261, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7261, 2021.

EGU21-8759 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

A hybrid dynamical-statistical downscaling approach for climate change impacts analysis on high resolution in the Greater Athens Area

Konstantinos V. Varotsos, Aggeliki Dandou, Giorgos Papangelis, Nikolaos Roukounakis, Maria Tombrou, and Christos Giannakopoulos

The available state-of-the art Regional Climate Model (RCM) simulations from the Euro-Cordex initiative have an horizontal resolution of about 12km which although is adequate for assessing regional climate change impacts is still coarse for studying the climate change impacts in an urban environment such as the Greater Athens Area (GAA). To this aim we propose a hybrid dynamical-statistical downscaling approach that produces high resolution, in the order of 1km, climate change projections for two future periods and under two RCP scenarios. To produce the higher resolution climate projections we combine the results of the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) - Version 3.9.1 -including a single-layer urban canopy model to represent the urban tile- with available RCMs simulations obtained from the Euro-Cordex database.

Initially an annual WRF, ERA interim driven, simulation for a year identified as a “representative year” for the period 1971-2000 in the GAA is performed at an horizontal resolution of 1km. Subsequently the spatial signal of the WRF simulation is passed to the ERA interim driven RCM simulations for the period 1971-2000 using the unbiasing bias adjusting method which maintains the absolute trend as well as the variability of the RCM simulated data at all time scales. In a second step the donwscaled RCM evaluation simulations are used to bias adjust the transient RCM simulations using the empirical quantile method (EQM). EQM works by matching the transient simulations empirical cumulative distributions to the evaluation ones. This is achieved by establishing a quantile-dependent correction function between them during the reference period. The correction functions are then applied to both the historical and the future periods.

In this study we present the results for temperature and precipitation but the methodology can be extended to other variables of interest assuming that the WRF and the evaluation RCM simulations adequately reproduce their spatial and temporal variability, respectively.

How to cite: Varotsos, K. V., Dandou, A., Papangelis, G., Roukounakis, N., Tombrou, M., and Giannakopoulos, C.: A hybrid dynamical-statistical downscaling approach for climate change impacts analysis on high resolution in the Greater Athens Area, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8759, 2021.

EGU21-15438 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4 | Highlight

Statistically downscaled climate projections as a support for adaptation tools

Rodica Tomozeiu, Roberta Monti, and Fabrizio Nerozzi

ADRIADAPT is a project inside the framework of the Italy-Croatia Interreg Cooperation Programme. Focused to contrast impacts over Adriatic coastal areas, which are particularly exposed to climate changes, it aims to provide a resilience information platform, suitable for performing vulnerability analysis and making decisions. In this work, climate projections are computed for some Emilia-Romagna coastal areas throughout a statistical downscaling scheme, based on the canonical correlation analysis between local climate indices (predictands) and large-scale fields (predictors). Firstly, the scheme has been calibrated and validated at a seasonal time scale for minimum and maximum temperature, tropical nights, heatwave duration, frost days, obtained by the ERACLITO observation gridded dataset for Emilia-Romagna, and large-scale fields (mean sea level pressure, 500hPa geopotential height, and 850hPa temperature) of the ECMWF-ERA40 and ERA-interim re-analysis data set. Calibration is performed over the 1961-1985 and 2006-2010 periods, while validation concerns the 1986-2005 period. Correlation coefficients, bias, and root mean square errors are taken as skill measures. Secondly, large-scale field data simulated by four global climate models from CMIP5 experiments (CMCC-CM, MPI ESM-MR, CNRM -CM5, Can-ESM2) in the framework of two emission scenarios (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5) has been treated as input to the statistical downscaling scheme to obtain local climate indices for the next four 20-year periods: 2021-2040, 2041-2060, 2061-2080, 2081-2100. Changes respect to the 1986-2005 period, taken as climatic reference, are evaluated. A Poor Man’s ensemble technique is applied to reduce uncertainties and give more statistical robustness to the results. The minimum and maximum temperature projections show a significant increase could be expected to occur for all seasons and both RCPs. The magnitude of changes is higher for the maximum temperature, especially during the summer season when changes up to 4°C for RCP4.5 and 8°C for RCP8.5 are expected at the end of the century. As regards extreme temperature indices, the seasonal tropical nights and heatwaves duration are projected to increase while frost days to decrease over all the four-time periods and for both emission scenarios.
This work has been performed in the framework of Italy-Croatia Interreg Cooperation Programme – ADRIADAPT Project (https://www.italy-croatia.eu/web/adriadapt/).

How to cite: Tomozeiu, R., Monti, R., and Nerozzi, F.: Statistically downscaled climate projections as a support for adaptation tools, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15438, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15438, 2021.

EGU21-11988 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

Near-past evolution of the magnitude and intensity of European heat waves

Zhuyun Ye, Jesper Christensen, Camilla Geels, and Ulas Im

This work presents results from downscaling experiments using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) in frame of the H2020-EXHAUSTION project for the period of 1980-2010 at 20km horizontal resolution over the European domain. Two simulations were carried out driven by ERA5 input by grid nudging (WRF_ERA5) and CESM2 output using 6 waves spectral nudging (WRF_CESM2), respectively. These near-past simulations have been rigorously evaluated with observations and reanalysis data including European Climate Assessment & Dataset (ECA&D), EOBS, and ERA5-land for the daily mean (TG), maximum (TX), and minimum (TN) surface temperatures over the whole Europe as well as five climate zones. The WRF simulations compared reasonably well with the observations. WRF_ERA5 showed a smaller root mean square error (RMSE) and higher correlations (r), while WRF_CESM2 performed better in terms of mean and normalized mean bias (MB and NMB). WRF_CESM2 is overall reliable to be used for future simulations.  In terms of the 30-year trend of TG, TX, and TN, WRF_CESM2 (0.6-0.66 °C/10yrs) showed faster increasing trends than WRF_ERA5 (0.29-0.35 °C/10yrs) and observations (0.27-0.41 °C/10yrs). Evaluations in different climate zones show smaller bias in north-western Europe and southern Europe. In terms of temporal evolution, eastern Europe showed the highest correlations. The worst model performance has been calculated for northern Europe. 

In addition, the Warm Spell Duration Index (WSDI) and the Heat Wave Magnitude Index daily (HWMId) have been calculated to represent the duration and magnitude of heat waves, respectively, for both simulations and observations. Strong and significant increasing trends are shown in eastern Europe and northern Europe for both WSDI and HWMId in all cases, with the fastest trends shown in EOBS (4 days/10yrs for WSDI, and 2/10yrs for HWMId), slowest trends in ECA&D (2 days/10yrs for WSDI, and 1/10yrs for HWMId), and trends in two WRF simulations are in between. No significant trends were found in southern Europe and north-western Europe in ECA&D, EOBS, and WRF_ERA5 simulation, while significant increasing trends were simulated in WRF_CESM2 in these two zones. The preliminary results suggested an increasing trend in the evolution of the future heat waves over Europe with implications on both direct impacts on human health, as well as indirect impacts through changes in exposure to pollutants such as ozone and particulate matter. Various future simulations are ongoing to address the impacts of climate change on the severity of heat waves under different levels of mitigation.

How to cite: Ye, Z., Christensen, J., Geels, C., and Im, U.: Near-past evolution of the magnitude and intensity of European heat waves, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-11988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-11988, 2021.

EGU21-1012 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

The NASA Earth Exchange Global Daily Downscaled Projections

Weile Wang, Bridget Thrasher, Andrew Michaelis, Ramakrishna Nemani, and Tsengdar Lee

The NASA Earth Exchange Global Daily Downscaled Projections (NEX-GDDP) archive contains statistically downscaled projections at 0.25-degree horizontal resolution and a daily timestep for eight variables from 1950 to 2099. The original version of NEX-GDDP is based on an ensemble of three experiments (historical, RCP4.5, and RCP 8.5) from the larger CMIP5 archive, while a new version currently under development is based on an ensemble of three comparable experiments (historical, SSP245, and SSP585) from the recently released CMIP6 archive. While the methodology used in the creation of both versions is the same (daily bias-corrected spatial disaggregation), we will explain the nuanced differences between the two executions of that method. In addition, we will present examples of differences and similarities in output between the two versions.

How to cite: Wang, W., Thrasher, B., Michaelis, A., Nemani, R., and Lee, T.: The NASA Earth Exchange Global Daily Downscaled Projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1012, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1012, 2021.

Floods are highly destructive natural hazards causing widespread impacts on socio-ecosystems. This hazard could be further amplified with the ongoing climate change, which will likely alter magnitude and frequency of floods. Estimating how flood regimes could change in the future is however not straightforward. The classical approach is to estimate future hydrological regimes from hydrological simulations forced by time series scenarii of weather variables for different future climate scenarii. The development of relevant weather scenarii for this is often critical. To be adapted to the critical space and time scales of the considered basins, weather scenarii are thus typically produced from climate models with downscaling models (either dynamic or statistical).

In this study, we aim to evaluate the capacity of such a simulation chain to reproduce floods observed in the upper Rhône River (10900 km², European Alps) over the last century. The modeling chain is made up of (i) the atmospheric reanalysis ERA-20C (1900-2010), (ii) the statistical downscaling model Analog, and (iii) the glacio-hydrological model GSM-SOCONT (Glacier and Snowmelt SOil CONTribution model; Schaefli et al., 2005). To assess the performance of this modeling chain, the simulated scenarii of mean areal precipitation and temperature are compared to the observed time series over the common period (1961-2010), whereas the discharge scenarii are compared to the reference time series (1920-2010).

In this presentation, we will discuss (i) the results obtained by the basic Analog method, namely a flood events underestimation due to an underestimation of extreme precipitation values, in particular 3-day and 5-day extreme precipitation, and (ii) the enhanced results obtained by the improved version of Analog SCAMP (Sequential Constructive Atmospheric Analogues for Multivariate weather Predictions; Raynaud et al., 2020) combined to the Schaake Shuffle method.

References:

Schaefli, B., Hingray, B., M. Niggli, M., Musy, A. (2005). A conceptual glacio-hydrological model for high mountainous catchments. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions, European Geosciences Union, 9, 95-109.

Raynaud, D., Hingray, B., Evin, G., Favre, A.-C., Chardon, J. (2020). Assessment of meteorological extremes using a synoptic weather generator and a downscaling model based on analogues. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions, European Geosciences Union, 24(9), 4339-4352.

How to cite: Legrand, C., Hingray, B., and Wilhelm, B.: Simulating catchment scale river discharges and flood events from large scale atmospheric information: Example of the Upper Rhône River (European Alps), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7843, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7843, 2021.

Regional climate projections using ultra-high resolution convection-permitting (CP) models are now increasingly available, with recent endeavours also focussing on vulnerable tropical regions. A number of recent studies have examined a pair of pan-Africa integrations of the Met Office CP model (CP4A), run at 4.4km resolution with 10 years of both a present-day simulation and a circa-2100 projection. However, experience from inter-disciplinary discussions has revealed different perspectives on the value of such experiments, with climate scientists emphasising the importance of an improved representation of convection, whereas applied scientists emphasise the importance of the unprecedented spatial scale of the available climate data. This raises critical questions about the usable spatial scales of such projections. Can CP models really provide robust information about future climate change at finer scales than parameterised regional climate models? We address this question with a focus on projected changes in rainfall, both seasonal means and daily extremes, both of which may be expected to exhibit heterogeneous climate responses in regions of large surface forcing. Although the capacity for statistically significant detail is found to be small in this short projection, detectable sub-25km variability is indeed apparent in regions of high topographic variability. Coastal regions, such as lakes and marine bays are also examined, along with urban boundaries. Furthermore, where no significant fine-scale detail is apparent (spatial heterogeneity is only due to sampling variability), we also examine the extent to which the robustness of climate information (better signal-to-noise ratios) can be enhanced for users by the spatial aggregation of model data.

How to cite: Rowell, D. and Berthou, S.: Fine-Scale Climate Projections for Africa: What Additional Robust Spatial Detail is Provided by a Convection-Permitting Model?  , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1283, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1283, 2021.

EGU21-8139 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

How strongly are mean and extreme precipitation coupled?

Nidhi Nishant and Steven Sherwood

Changes in mean and extreme precipitation are among the most important consequences of climate change. Here we examine the relationship between the mean and three different measures of extreme precipitation over the Australian continent, from a regional climate projection ensemble. We show that model uncertainty in mean and extreme precipitation are tightly coupled for both the present-day climate and future changes. On the continental scale the differences in mean precipitation explain 80-99% of the variance in the extremes. We also find that in most regions except along the coasts, precipitation statistics projected by regional modelling system (RCM) are highly predictable from the mean precipitation of the global model (GCM) providing the boundary conditions. In coastal regions RCMs are more accurate than GCMs and they also have more impact on present-day statistics, however, this impact disappears for future changes, suggesting that improved present-day accuracy will not carry over to future changes.

How to cite: Nishant, N. and Sherwood, S.: How strongly are mean and extreme precipitation coupled?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8139, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8139, 2021.

EGU21-10656 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

The added value of downscaling for high mountain sites

Marlis Hofer and Johannes Horak

The availability of in situ atmospheric observations decreases with elevation and topographic complexity. Data sets based on numerical atmospheric modeling, such as reanalysis data sets, represent an alternative source of information, but often suffer from inaccuracies, e.g., due to insufficient spatial resolution. In this contribution, we investigate the added value of sDoG, a reanalysis data postprocessing and downscaling tool designed to extend short-term and/or interrupted weather station data from high mountain sites to the baseline climate. sDoG is applied to ERA interim predictors to produce a retrospective forecast of daily air temperature at the Vernagtbach climate monitoring site (2640 MSL) in the Central European Alps. sDoG training and cross-validation is based on observations from 2002 to 2012. The availability of observations at the Vernagtbach climate monitoring site further back in time allows us to perform a true evaluation: "true evaluation" in contrast to cross-validation, by assessing the performance of the sDoG retrospective forecast for the period 1979 to 2001.

We demonstrate the ability of sDoG in modeling air temperature in the true evaluation period for different temporal scales. sDoG adds significant value over a selection of reference data sets, including state-of-the-art global and regional reanalysis data sets, output by a regional climate model, and an observation-based gridded product (SPARTACUS). However, we identify limitations of sDoG in modeling summer air temperature variations, most probably related to changes of the microclimate around the Vernagtbach climate monitoring site that violate the stationarity assumption underlying sDoG. Comparing the performance of the considered reference data sets reveals that higher resolution data sets do not necessarily add value over data sets with lower spatial resolution. For example, the global reanalyses ERA5 (31 km resolution) and ERA interim (80 km resolution) both clearly outperform the higher resolution surface analyses ERA5-Land (11 km resolution), HARMONIE (11 km resolution), and UERRA MESCAN-SURFEX (5.5 km resolution). Performance differences amongst ERA5 and ERA interim, by contrast, are comparably small. The results highlight the importance of station-scale uncertainty assessments of atmospheric numerical model output and downscaling products for high mountain areas, both for data users and model developers.

How to cite: Hofer, M. and Horak, J.: The added value of downscaling for high mountain sites, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10656, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10656, 2021.

EGU21-14971 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

Better downscaling results for the right reasons - A process based evaluation of the ICAR model

Johannes Horak, Marlis Hofer, Alexander Gohm, and Mathias W. Rotach

The evaluation of models in general is a non-trivial task. Even a well established model may yield correct results for the wrong reasons, i.e. by a different chain of processes than found in observations. While guidelines and strategies exist to maximize the chances that results match measurements for the right reasons, these are mostly applicable to full-physics models, such as numerical weather prediction models. The Intermediate Complexity Atmospheric Research (ICAR) model is a comparatively novel atmospheric model employed to downscale atmospheric fields. ICAR uses linear mountain wave theory to represent the wind field and advects atmospheric quantities, such as temperature and moisture in this wind field. Additionally a microphysics scheme is applied to represent the formation of clouds and precipitation.

We conducted an in-depth process-based evaluation of ICAR, employing idealized simulations to increase the understanding of the model and develop recommendations to improve its results. We contrast the ICAR simulations to Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model simulations and asses the impact of our recommendations with a case study for the South Island of New Zealand.

Our results suggest two key aspects relevant for ICAR to obtain the correct results for the right reasons. Firstly, the representation of the wind field within the domain improves when the dry and the moist Brunt-Väisälä frequencies are calculated in accordance to linear mountain wave theory from the unperturbed base state rather than from the time-dependent perturbed atmosphere. Secondly, the results show that there is a lowest possible model top elevation that should not be undercut to avoid influences of the model top on cloud and precipitation processes within the domain. We analysed the causes for the differences between the idealized ICAR and WRF simulations and attribute them to the non-linearities in the WRF wind field and additional simplifications in the governing equations of ICAR. With our recommended ICAR setup applied to the real case study we find an upwind spatial shift of the precipitation maximum in comparison to the results obtained with the original ICAR setup. Additionally our results show that when model skill is evaluated from statistical metrics based on comparisons to surface observations only, such analysis may not reflect the skill of the model in capturing atmospheric processes such as gravity waves and cloud formation.

Overall our findings have consequences for the interpretation of past results obtained with ICAR and suggest improvements to ICAR in future studies.

How to cite: Horak, J., Hofer, M., Gohm, A., and Rotach, M. W.: Better downscaling results for the right reasons - A process based evaluation of the ICAR model, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14971, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14971, 2021.

EGU21-13487 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.4

Evaluating RCM Added Value in Climate Change Projections

John Scinocca

When a regional climate model is used to investigate and understand an issue related to climate change, in principle, an understanding of that issue will already be available from the global GCM simulations that provided the RCM driving data. From this perspective, the downscaling exercise is essentially one of adding understanding, or value, to an existing GCM result and so, it would seem sensible that statements regarding the value added by RCM downscaling be put into the context of the driving GCM's results. While such added value is central to the downscaling exercise, its evaluation is an intrinsically difficult undertaking for a variety of reasons - not least of which is the lack of a consensus on how added value should be defined. Irrespective of the definition of added value, however, progress can still be made on this issue. In the present study, we develop a methodology for an appreciable difference analysis of the climate change results in RCMs relative to their driving GCMs.  Since added value can only exist where appreciable differences occur in the climate change results of the global and regional models, the present approach provides a useful tool to direct attention to areas where added value potentially exist and conversely rule out areas where it does not.  The approach is illustrated on an ensemble of CMIP5 climate change experiments using the Canadian Earth-system model CanESM2 and its downscaled counterpart CanRCM4.

How to cite: Scinocca, J.: Evaluating RCM Added Value in Climate Change Projections, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13487, 2021.

CL5.2.6 – Climate Data Homogenization and Analysis of Climate Variability, Trends and Extremes

EGU21-872 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Creation of a representative climatological database for Hungary from 1870 to 2020

Beatrix Izsák, Mónika Lakatos, Rita Pongrácz, Tamás Szentimrey, and Olivér Szentes

Climate studies, in particular those related to climate change, require long, high-quality, controlled data sets that are representative both spatially and temporally. Changing the conditions in which the measurements were taken, for example relocating the station, or a change in the frequency and time of measurements, or in the instruments used may result in an fractured time series. To avoid these problems, data errors and inhomogeneities are eliminated for Hungary and data gaps are filled in by using the MASH (Multiple Analysis of Series for Homogenization, Szentimrey) homogenization procedure. Homogenization of the data series raises the problem that how to homogenize long and short data series together within the same process, since the meteorological observation network was upgraded significantly in the last decades. It is possible to solve these problems with the method MASH due to its adequate mathematical principles for such purposes. The solution includes the synchronization of the common parts’ inhomogeneities within three (or more) different MASH processing of the three (or more) datasets with different lengths. Then, the homogenized station data series are interpolated to the whole area of Hungary, to a 0.1 degree regular grid. For this purpose, the MISH (Meteorological Interpolation based on Surface Homogenized Data Basis; Szentimrey and Bihari) program system is used. The MISH procedure was developed specifically for the interpolation of various meteorological elements. Hungarian time series of daily average temperature and precipitation sum for the period 1870-2020 were used in this study, thus providing the longest homogenized, gridded daily data sets in the region with up-to-date information already included.

Supported by the ÚNKP-20-3 New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation andTechnology from the source of the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund.

How to cite: Izsák, B., Lakatos, M., Pongrácz, R., Szentimrey, T., and Szentes, O.: Creation of a representative climatological database for Hungary from 1870 to 2020, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-872, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-872, 2021.

EGU21-918 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Local-scale uncertainty of seasonal mean and extreme values of in-situ snow depth and snow fall measurements

Moritz Buchmann, Michael Begert, Stefan Brönnimann, and Christoph Marty

Measurements of snow depth and snowfall can vary dramatically over small distances. However, it is not clear if this applies to all derived variables and is the same for all seasons.

To analyse the impacts of local-scale variations we compiled a unique set of parallel snow measurements for the Swiss Alps consisting of 30 station pairs with up to 50 years of parallel data. Station pairs are mostly located in the same villages or within close proximity (less than 3km horizontally and 100m vertically).

We calculated a series of snow climate indicators as derived values from the daily snow depth and snowfall measurements for various seasons (DJF, MA, and November-April). Snow climate indicators include average snow depth, max. snow depth, sum of new snow as well as snow onset and disappearance dates. Further, we quantified the return levels of a 10- and 50-year event for max. snow depth and the 3-day new snow sum to investigate the impact of local-scale variations on the estimation of extreme events, which are often used for prevention measures. We computed the relative differences for all these indicators at each station pair to demonstrate the potential uncertainty.
To address the local-scale variations of the measurement sites, we calculated the potential sunshine duration for each known location using GIS and a DEM. However, information from metadata (including the exact coordinates) has to be treated with caution as it can be correct, incomplete, incorrect or simply missing at all.

We found the largest differences for all indicators in spring and the smallest in DJF and Nov-Apr. Furthermore, there is hardly any difference between DJF and Nov-Apr. Surprisingly, median differences of snow disappearance dates are rather small (three days) and similar to the ones found for snow onset dates (two days).
We tried to explain the variations of snow disappearance dates with accumulated potential sunshine duration during March and April, however, no clear relationship could be found. This suggests that the potential sunshine duration is not an appropriate proxy for local-scale variations, mainly because vegetation, buildings and the like are not available in a DEM.

How to cite: Buchmann, M., Begert, M., Brönnimann, S., and Marty, C.: Local-scale uncertainty of seasonal mean and extreme values of in-situ snow depth and snow fall measurements, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-918, 2021.

EGU21-1170 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Analysis of global trends of total column water vapour from multiple years of OMI observations

Christian Borger, Steffen Beirle, and Thomas Wagner

Atmospheric water plays a key role for the Earth’s energy budget and temperature distribution via radiative effects (clouds and vapour) and latent heat transport. Thus, the distribution and transport of water vapour are closely linked to atmospheric dynamics on different spatiotemporal scales. In this context, global monitoring of the water vapour distribution is essential for numerical weather prediction, climate modelling, and a better understanding of climate feedbacks.

Total column water vapour (TCWV), or integrated water vapour, can be retrieved from satellite spectra in the visible “blue” spectral range (430-450nm) using Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS). The UV-vis spectral range offers several advantages for monitoring the global water vapour distribution: for instance it allows for accurate, straightforward retrievals over ocean and land even under partly-cloudy conditions.

To investigate changes in the TCWV distribution from space, the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on board NASA’s Aura satellite is particularly promising as it provides long-term measurements (late 2004-ongoing) with daily global coverage.

Here, we present a global analysis of trends of total column water vapour retrieved from multiple years of OMI observations (2005-2020). Furthermore, we put our results in context to trends of other climate data records and validate the OMI TCWV data by comparisons to additional reference data sets.

How to cite: Borger, C., Beirle, S., and Wagner, T.: Analysis of global trends of total column water vapour from multiple years of OMI observations, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1170, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1170, 2021.

EGU21-1855 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

A quality control system for historical in situ precipitation data

Xiaolan Wang, Vincent Cheng, and Yang Feng

In situ precipitation data are recorded at observing stations typically using either manual or automated gauges (some countries have ruler measurements of snowfall, which were then converted to their water equivalent using some version ratio). Unfortunately, there are random erroneous values, which could be unusually large values or false 0s. The latter usually arose from mis-recorded missing values (i.e., missing values were mis-recorded as 0 precipitation in the climate Archive).

In doing quality control (QC) of Canadian in situ precipitation data records, we have found that it is necessary to apply a pair of QC procedures to identify these two types of random errors: one procedure is applied to the untransformed monthly precipitation series, which is good at finding outliers of unusually large values; another is applied to the log-transformed monthly precipitation series, log(P+0.1) (in mm), which is good at identifying outliers of zero or near-zero monthly total precipitation. The four nearest stations’ data for the same month are used to determine if the suspect outlier is a real extreme value or an erroneous value. All the monthly values identified to be erroneous are set to missing, and so are the corresponding daily values. 

How to cite: Wang, X., Cheng, V., and Feng, Y.: A quality control system for historical in situ precipitation data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1855, 2021.

EGU21-2173 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Recent reversal of mean wind speed and gusts across the Iberian Peninsula and its relationship with modes of climate variability, 1961-2019

Eduardo Utrabo-Carazo, Cesar Azorin-Molina, Encarna Serrano, Enric Aguilar, and Manola Brunet

In a context of climate change, near-surface wind speed (SWS) has received less attention than other variables such as air temperature or precipitation, despite its undeniable environmental and socio-economic impacts. Studies suggest a generalized decrease of SWS in continental surfaces located in the middle latitudes from 1979 to 2010, the so-called stilling phenomenon, and an increase in it thereafter, which has been termed reversal or recovery phenomenon. Recent studies indicate that multidecade oscillations produced by the internal variability of the climate system are responsible for both phenomena. The aim of this work is to advance in the evaluation of the multidecadal variability and causes of the stilling and reversal in the observed SWS, covering the complete 2010s decade and focusing on the Iberian Peninsula region (IP). More specifically, the particular objectives of this study are: (i) to determine for the first time the occurrence of the reversal phenomenon in the IP over the last decade(s), identifying its onset year and its magnitude; (ii) to deepen into the relation between atmospheric teleconnection indices and observed trends in SWS; and (iii) to link atmospheric circulation changes to observed SWS variability. For that purpose, homogenized series of mean wind speed and gusts will be used, as well as data from the ERA5 reanalysis (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasting). Three SWS parameters will be analysed: monthly mean SWS anomaly; monthly mean daily peak wind gust (DPWG) anomaly; and number of days in which the value of DPWG exceeds the 90th percentile of the series considered. Trends of these parameters will be calculated, as well as the correlation between them and the modes of variability that govern in the region: North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Mediterranean Oscillation (MO) and Western Mediterranean Oscillation. Finally, trends of these modes of variability and of other parameters dependent on atmospheric circulation (e.g., geostrophic wind) will be calculated to try to clarify the drivers of the observed changes in the SWS.

How to cite: Utrabo-Carazo, E., Azorin-Molina, C., Serrano, E., Aguilar, E., and Brunet, M.: Recent reversal of mean wind speed and gusts across the Iberian Peninsula and its relationship with modes of climate variability, 1961-2019, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2173, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2173, 2021.

EGU21-2936 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Quantifying heating biases in marine air temperature observations, ~1790 - present

Thomas Cropper, Elizabeth Kent, David Berry, Richard Cornes, and Beatriz Recinos-Rivas

Accurate, long-term time series of near-surface air temperature (AT) are the fundamental datasets on which the magnitude of anthropogenic climate change is scientifically and societally addressed. Across the ocean, these (near-surface) climate records use Sea Surface Temperature (SST) instead of Marine Air Temperature (MAT) and blend the SST and AT over land to create datasets. MAT has often been overlooked as a data choice as daytime MAT observations from ships are known to contain warm biases due to the storage of accumulated solar energy. Two recent MAT datasets, CLASSnmat (1881 – 2019) and UAHNMAT (1900 – 2018), both use night-time MAT observations only. Daytime MAT observations in the International Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Data Set (ICOADS) account for over half of the MAT observations in ICOADS, and this proportion increases further back in time (i.e. pre-1850s). If long-term MAT records over the ocean are to be extended, the use of daytime MAT is vital.

 

To adjust for the daytime MAT heating bias, and apply it to ICOADS, we present the application of a physics-based model, which accounts for the accumulated energy storage throughout the day. As the ‘true’ diurnal cycle of MAT over the ocean has not been, to-date, adequately quantified, our approach also removes the diurnal cycle from ICOADS observations and generates a night-time equivalent MAT for all observations. We fit this model to MAT observations from groups of ships in ICOADS that share similar heating biases and metadata characteristics. This enables us to use the empirically derived coefficients (representing the physical energy transfer terms of the heating model) obtained from the fit for use in removal of the heating bias and diurnal cycle from ship-based MAT observations throughout ICOADS which share similar characteristics (i.e. we can remove the diurnal cycle from a ship which only reports once daily at noon). This adjustment will create an MAT record of night-time-equivalent temperatures that will enable an extension of the marine surface AT record back into the 18th century.

How to cite: Cropper, T., Kent, E., Berry, D., Cornes, R., and Recinos-Rivas, B.: Quantifying heating biases in marine air temperature observations, ~1790 - present, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-2936, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2936, 2021.

EGU21-3287 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Observed snow depth trends in the European Alps 1971 to 2019

Michael Matiu, Alice Crespi, Giacomo Bertoldi, Carlo Maria Carmagnola, Christoph Marty, Samuel Morin, Wolfgang Schöner, Daniele Cat Berro, Gabriele Chiogna, Ludovica De Gregorio, Sven Kotlarski, Bruno Majone, Gernot Resch, Silvia Terzago, Mauro Valt, Walter Beozzo, Paola Cianfarra, Isabelle Gouttevin, and Giorgia Marcolini and the Rest of the European Alps station snow observations team

The European Alps stretch over a range of climate zones, which affect the spatial distribution of snow. Previous analyses of station observations of snow were confined to regional analyses, which complicates comparisons between regions and makes Alpine wide conclusions questionable. Here, we present an Alpine wide analysis of snow depth from six Alpine countries: Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Slovenia, and Switzerland; including altogether more than 2000 stations, of which more than 800 were used for the trend assessment. Using a principal component analysis and k-means clustering, we identified five main modes of variability and five regions, which match the climatic forcing zones: north & high Alpine, northeast, northwest, southeast, and south & high Alpine. Linear trends of monthly mean snow depth between 1971 and 2019 showed decreases in snow depth for most stations for November to May. The average trend among all stations for seasonal (November to May) mean snow depth was -8.4 % per decade, for seasonal maximum snow depth -5.6 % per decade, and for seasonal snow cover duration -5.6 % per decade. However, regional trends differed substantially after accounting for elevation, which challenges the notion of generalizing results from one region to another or to the whole Alps. This study presents an analysis of station snow depth series with the most comprehensive spatial coverage in the European Alps to date.

How to cite: Matiu, M., Crespi, A., Bertoldi, G., Carmagnola, C. M., Marty, C., Morin, S., Schöner, W., Cat Berro, D., Chiogna, G., De Gregorio, L., Kotlarski, S., Majone, B., Resch, G., Terzago, S., Valt, M., Beozzo, W., Cianfarra, P., Gouttevin, I., and Marcolini, G. and the Rest of the European Alps station snow observations team: Observed snow depth trends in the European Alps 1971 to 2019, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3287, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3287, 2021.

EGU21-3411 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Opposite trends of sea-breeze speeds and gusts in Eastern Iberian Peninsula, 1961-2019

Shalenys Bedoya-Valestt, Cesar Azorin-Molina, José A. Guijarro, and Victor J. Sanchez-Morcillo

Long-term trends of local winds such as sea breezes have been less addressed in climate research, despite their impacts on broad environmental and socioeconomic spheres, such as weather and climate, agriculture and hydrology, wind-power industry, air quality or even human health, among many others. In a warming climate, sea breezes could be affected by changes on air temperature, as these onshore winds are thermally-driven by gradients between the sea-land air, but also by ocean-atmosphere oscillations or changes in large-scale atmospheric circulation. In the last few decades, advances in wind trends studies evidenced a recovery in global wind stilling during the last 10 years, and differences in the sign-magnitude of wind speed trends were found at seasonal-scale, suggesting the hypothetic effect of the reinforcement of local wind circulations in the warm seasons.

In this study, we analyze for the first time the long-term trends, multidecadal variability and possible drivers of the sea-breeze speeds and gusts in Eastern Iberian Peninsula during the last 58 years (1961-2019), using homogenized wind speed and gusts data from 16 meteorological stations. To identify potential sea breeze episodes, we developed a robust automated method based on alternative criteria. Our results suggest a decoupling between the declining sea-breeze speeds and the strengthening of the maximum gusts for much of the 1961-2019 period at annual, seasonal and monthly scales, but differences based on locations were also found. Because sea breeze changes can be driven by multiple complex factors (i.e. land use changes, land-sea air temperature gradient, complex orography, etc.), the attribution of causes is challenging. To better understand the causes behind the opposite trends between sea-breeze speeds and gusts, we investigate the effect of e.g. the changes in large-scale atmospheric circulation or physical-local factors.

How to cite: Bedoya-Valestt, S., Azorin-Molina, C., Guijarro, J. A., and Sanchez-Morcillo, V. J.: Opposite trends of sea-breeze speeds and gusts in Eastern Iberian Peninsula, 1961-2019, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3411, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3411, 2021.

EGU21-5848 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Advances in the data rescue and digitization of historical wind speed observations in Sweden: the WINDGUST project

Erik Engström, Cesar Azorin-Molina, Lennart Wern, Sverker Hellström, Christophe Sturm, Magnus Joelsson, Gangfeng Zhang, Lorenzo Minola, Kaiqiang Deng, and Deliang Chen

Here we present the progress of the first work package (WP1) of the project “Assessing centennial wind speed variability from a historical weather data rescue project in Sweden” (WINDGUST), funded by FORMAS – A Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development (ref. 2019-00509); previously introduced in EGU2019-17792-1 and EGU2020-3491. In a global climate change, one of the major uncertainties on the causes driving the climate variability of winds (i.e., the “stilling” phenomenon and the recent “recovery” since the 2010s) is mainly due to short availability (i.e., since the 1960s) and low quality of observed wind records as stated by the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The WINDGUST is a joint initiative between the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI) and the University of Gothenburg aimed at filling the key gap of short availability and low quality of wind datasets, and improve the limited knowledge on the causes driving wind speed variability in a changing climate across Sweden.

During 2020, we worked in WP1 to rescue historical wind speed series available in the old weather archives at SMHI for the 1920s-1930s. In the process we followed the “Guidelines on Best Practices for Climate Data Rescue” of the World Meteorological Organization. Our protocol consisted on: (i) designing a template for digitization; (ii) digitizing papers by an imaging process based on scanning and photographs; and (iii) typing numbers of wind speed data into the template. We will report the advances and current status, challenges and experiences learned during the development of WP1. Until new year 2020/2021 eight out of thirteen selected stations spanning over the years 1925 to 1948 have been scanned and digitized by three staff members of SMHI during 1,660 manhours.

How to cite: Engström, E., Azorin-Molina, C., Wern, L., Hellström, S., Sturm, C., Joelsson, M., Zhang, G., Minola, L., Deng, K., and Chen, D.: Advances in the data rescue and digitization of historical wind speed observations in Sweden: the WINDGUST project, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5848, 2021.

EGU21-6501 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Comparison of gridding methods for monthly precipitation for trend analysis in Canada

Kian Abbasnezhadi and Xiaolan Wang

During the last couple of decades, Canada’s national and regional climate trend assessment has been based on a set of gridded temperature and precipitation monthly anomalies, known as the Canadian Gridded (CanGRD) data, which were produced using Optimal Interpolation (OI). In CanGRD, temperature anomalies and normalized precipitation anomalies at 463 stations of the Adjusted/Homogenized Canadian Climate Data (AHCCD) are interpolated to a 50-km equal-area grid over Canada. The input AHCCD precipitation data had been previously adjusted for known problems such as wind-induced gauge undercatch, wetting loss, and trace amounts; and joined stations series were also tested and adjusted. However, the performance of the CanGRD gridding method (i.e., the OI method) has never been evaluated against other gridding methods. The objective of this study is to evaluate CanGRD method against an ordinary kriging (KG) method. To this end, an observation-based ANUSPLIN-gridded monthly precipitation dataset (which is based on precipitation data from 3000+ stations) was used as the truth dataset, and ANUSPLIN estimates of monthly precipitation amounts at the 463 AHCCD stations were used as input data to the gridding models. In search for a better way to use KG, we took two approaches to apply KG: (1) KG-GP approach, in which KG was applied directly to the monthly total precipitation amounts; and (2) KG-GNGA approach, in which KG was applied separately to the monthly normals (for each calendar month) and the monthly anomalies. The gridded normals (GN) and the gridded anomalies (GA) were then combined together (GN+GA) for comparison with the gridded precipitation (GP) from the KG-GP approach to find out which of the two approaches is more skillful. The gridded anomalies (GA) from the KG-GNGA approach is comparable, and was compared with the CanGRD data, noting that in the CanGRD method, the anomalies rather than precipitation totals are gridded. In both evaluations, the gridded datasets were compared against their counterparts derived from the truth dataset using skill measurements such as Mean Absolute Error (MAE), Root Mean Squared Error (RMSE), and Pattern Correlation Score (PCS). The results show that (1) the KG-GNGA approach notably outperforms the KG-GP approach, and (2) the KG-GNGA method significantly outperforms the OI method used in CanGRD. This study is being expanded to include other gridding methods in the comparison.

How to cite: Abbasnezhadi, K. and Wang, X.: Comparison of gridding methods for monthly precipitation for trend analysis in Canada, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6501, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6501, 2021.

EGU21-6680 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

A validation scheme for homogenization techniques on a Swedish temperature network using artificial inhomogeneities (1950-2005)

Giulio Nils Caroletti, Tommaso Caloiero, Magnus Joelsson, and Roberto Coscarelli

Homogenization techniques and missing value reconstruction have grown in importance in climatology given their relevance in establishing coherent data records over which climate signals can be correctly attributed, discarding apparent changes depending on instrument inhomogeneities, e.g., change in instrumentation, location, time of measurement.

However, it is not generally possible to assess homogenized results directly, as true data values are not known. Thus, to validate homogenization techniques, artificially inhomogeneous datasets, also called benchmark datasets, are created from known homogeneous datasets. Results from their homogenization can be assessed and used to rank, evaluate and/or validate techniques used.

Considering temperature data, the aims of this work are: i) to determine which metrics (bias, absolute error, factor of exceedance, root mean squared error, and Pearson’s correlation coefficient) can be meaningfully used to validate the best-performing homogenization technique in a region; ii) to evaluate through a Pearson correlation analysis if homogenization techniques’ performance depends on physical features of a station (i.e., latitude, altitude and distance from the sea) or on the nature of the inhomogeneities (i.e., the number of break points and missing data).

With this aims, a southern Sweden temperature database with homogeneous, maximum and minimum temperature data from 100 ground stations over the period 1950-2005 has been used. Starting from these data, inhomogeneous datasets were created introducing up to 7 artificial breaks for each ground station and an average of 107 missing data. Then, 3 homogenization techniques were applied, ACMANT (Adapted Caussinus-Mestre Algorithm for Networks of Temperature series), and two versions of HOMER (HOMogenization software in R): the standard, automated setup mode (Standard-HOMER) and a manual setup developed and performed at the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI-HOMER).

Results showed that root mean square error, absolute bias and factor of exceedance were the most useful metrics to evaluate improvements in the homogenized datasets: for instance, RMSE for both variables was reduced from an average of 0.71-0.89K (corrupted dataset) to 0.50-0.60K (Standard-HOMER), 0.51-0.61K (SMHI-HOMER) and 0.46-0.53K (ACMANT), respectively.

Globally, HOMER performed better regarding the factor of exceedance, while ACMANT outperformed it with regard to root mean square error and absolute error. Regardless of the technique used, the homogenization quality anti-correlated meaningfully to the number of breaks. Missing data did not seem to have an impact on HOMER, while it negatively affected ACMANT, because this method does not fill-in missing data in the same drastic way.

In general, the nature of the datasets had a more important role in yielding good homogenization results than associated physical parameters: only for minimum temperature, distance from the sea and altitude showed a weak but significant correlation with the factor of exceedance and the root mean square error.

This study has been performed within the INDECIS Project, that is part of ERA4CS, an ERA-NET initiated by JPI Climate, and funded by FORMAS (SE), DLR (DE), BMWFW (AT), IFD (DK), MINECO (ES), ANR (FR) with co-funding by the European Union (Grant 690462).

How to cite: Caroletti, G. N., Caloiero, T., Joelsson, M., and Coscarelli, R.: A validation scheme for homogenization techniques on a Swedish temperature network using artificial inhomogeneities (1950-2005), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-6680, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-6680, 2021.

EGU21-7642 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Homogenisation of monthly temperatures of the Swedish observational network 1850-2020

L. Magnus T. Joelsson, Christophe Sturm, Johan Södling, and Erik Engtsröm

Monthly averages of statistical temperature variables (i.e. monthly averages of daily maximum, minimum, and mean temperatures) are homogenised for a large part of the Swedish observational network dataset from 1850 to 2020. Data from 573–587 weather stations (depending on variable) are coupled into 299–303 time series. The coupling of time series is partly performed automatically following a set of criteria of geographical proximity, altitude, proximity to coast line, time series overlap, and correlation of the data series.

The homogenisation of the data set is performed with the recently developed homogenisation tool Bart. Bart is a fully automatic modification of the homogenisation tool HOMER. Bart uses a set of input parameters to accept or reject potential homogeneity break points suggested by the different functions of HOMER. Bart performs correction and gap filling of the data series according to the accepted homogeneity break points. A rudimentary sensitivity test is performed to examine how sensitive the homogenisation is to the selection of the input parameters assumed most important and to find a optimal set up of these parameters. Other features in Bart include a novel procedure for the selection of reference time series to account for uneven data coverage, and parallel computing to reduce the computational time.

An important application of the homogenised data set is the calculation of the climate indicator of temperature. The climate indicator of temperature is the average annual mean temperatures of thirty-nine weather stations, carefully selected to represent the climate in Sweden over the last 170 years. The use of homogenised data gives a 1.8 °C (10 a)-1 greater warming than if raw data is used from 1860 to present, the period for which data coverage is sufficient.

How to cite: Joelsson, L. M. T., Sturm, C., Södling, J., and Engtsröm, E.: Homogenisation of monthly temperatures of the Swedish observational network 1850-2020, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7642, 2021.

EGU21-8502 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Towards a continuous NASA cloud climate data record from MODIS to VIIRS

Kerry Meyer, Steven Platnick, Robert Holz, Steven Ackerman, Andrew Heidinger, Nandana Amarasinghe, Galina Wind, Richard Frey, and Steve Dutcher

The Suomi NPP and JPSS series VIIRS imagers provide an opportunity to extend the NASA EOS Terra (20+ year) and Aqua (18+ year) MODIS cloud climate data record into the new generation NOAA operational weather satellite era. However, while building a consistent, long-term cloud data record has proven challenging for the two MODIS sensors alone, the transition to VIIRS presents additional challenges due to its lack of key water vapor and CO2 absorbing channels available on MODIS that are used for high cloud detection and cloud-top property retrievals, and a mismatch in the spectral location of the 2.2µm shortwave infrared channels on MODIS and VIIRS that has important implications on inter-sensor consistency of cloud optical/microphysical property retrievals and cloud thermodynamic phase. Moreover, sampling differences between MODIS and VIIRS, including spatial resolution and local observation time, and inter-sensor relative radiometric calibration pose additional challenges. To create a continuous, long-term cloud climate data record that merges the observational records of MODIS and VIIRS while mitigating the impacts of these sensor differences, a common algorithm approach was pursued that utilizes a subset of spectral channels available on each imager. The resulting NASA CLDMSK (cloud mask) and CLDPROP (cloud-top and optical/microphysical properties) products were publicly released for Aqua MODIS and SNPP VIIRS in early 2020, with NOAA-20 (JPSS-1) VIIRS following in early 2021. Here, we present an overview of the MODIS-VIIRS CLDMSK and CLDPROP common algorithm approach, discuss efforts to monitor and address relative radiometric calibration differences, and highlight early analysis of inter-sensor cloud product dataset continuity.

How to cite: Meyer, K., Platnick, S., Holz, R., Ackerman, S., Heidinger, A., Amarasinghe, N., Wind, G., Frey, R., and Dutcher, S.: Towards a continuous NASA cloud climate data record from MODIS to VIIRS, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8502, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8502, 2021.

EGU21-8706 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Wind speed variability over the South Shetland Islands, 1988-2019: the relationship between easterlies winds and SAM

Miguel Andres Martin, Cesar Azorin Molina, Eduardo Utrabo Carazo, Shalenys Bedoya Valestt, and Jose Antonio Guijarro

The Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most affected regions in a warming climate. Climate change not only involves rising air temperatures or changing precipitation patterns, but also wind. Over the past few decades, one of the most prominent changes in the near-Antarctic climate has been the southward shift of the westerly winds, associated with a positive trend in the Southern Annular Mode index (SAM). Some studies revealed that the poleward shift of the westerlies results in an increased in the seasonality of the coastal easterlies, concretely an increase in the difference between weak easterly winds in summer and strong easterlies in winter. The assessment and attribution of the variability of the easterly winds that encircle the coastline is crucial due to its influence e.g. (i) in the sea ice formation and export, (ii) a variation in the easterly winds can modify the Antarctic Bottom Water formation and properties, (iii) the heat transport trough the continent. Due to operational challenges of measuring weather data in the Antarctic region, there are few long-terms time series and studies dealing with wind trends and variability. In this work, wind series from 1988 to 2019 from the Spanish Juan Carlos I Base, located in the South Shetland Islands, specifically in Livingston Island , have been used for the first time to fill this research niche. Speed series have been subjected to a robust quality control and homogenization protocol in Climatol. The results of the magnitude, sign and decadal variability of this series have been compared with the same results for the same time period for the data of ERA5 reanalysis, all of them at three time scales: annual, seasonal and monthly. For both observations and ERA5 we investigate the relationship between speed series and SAM.

How to cite: Andres Martin, M., Azorin Molina, C., Utrabo Carazo, E., Bedoya Valestt, S., and Guijarro, J. A.: Wind speed variability over the South Shetland Islands, 1988-2019: the relationship between easterlies winds and SAM, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-8706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-8706, 2021.

EGU21-9708 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Mending and extending observational temperature series by linear and nonlinear regression

Jiří Mikšovský and Petr Štěpánek

While time series of meteorological measurements from land-based weather stations still represent one of the basic types of data employed in climate research, it not uncommon for these records to be incomplete, interrupted by periods of missing or otherwise compromised values. Such gaps typically need to be filled before a subsequent analysis can be performed, and records from other nearby measuring sites are frequently used for this purpose. In this presentation, results of central European daily temperatures estimation from other concurrent measurements by various statistical methods are showcased, with a particular emphasis on assessing potential benefits of application of nonlinear regression techniques. Using multi-decadal daily temperature series originating from a dense network of weather stations covering the territory of the Czech Republic, we show that while nonlinear regression does not always outperform its linear counterpart, it can substantially improve accuracy of temperature estimates for some target locations. The gain is shown to be especially prominent for sites exhibiting atypical behavior compared to their local geographic neighborhood, such as isolated mountain-based stations. In addition to regression-based restoration of compromised segments in the temperature records, use of this methodology for extending the temperature records beyond their original period of measurements is also discussed, as well as its potential for homogeneity testing.

How to cite: Mikšovský, J. and Štěpánek, P.: Mending and extending observational temperature series by linear and nonlinear regression, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9708, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9708, 2021.

EGU21-9944 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Identifying exposure biases in early instrumental data

Emily Wallis, Timothy Osborn, Michael Taylor, David Lister, and Philip Jones

Long observational records of land surface air temperature are vital to our understanding of climate variability and change, as well as for testing predictions of climatic trends. However, of the relatively few long observational records which exist, many contain inhomogeneities or biases resulting from changing instrumentation, station location/surroundings and/or observing practises. One of the most significant issues is the exposure bias. Prior to the widespread adoption of louvered Stevenson-type screens in the late-19th century, various (often insufficient) approaches were used to shield thermometers. Each approach exposed the thermometer to differing levels of solar radiation, thus introducing inhomogeneities into individual station records and biases across regions, if similar approaches were used. Poorly shielded thermometers, for example, tended to read higher during the summer half year than those in Stevenson-type screens. Despite a number of studies documenting the presence of the exposure bias in early instrumental data, relatively few corrections have been applied or incorporated into global temperature datasets. This is largely due to the pervasive nature of the bias and a lack of observational metadata impeding bias identification or estimation of the appropriate correction.

In this work we explore a range of datasets to identify the potential for exposure bias in early instrumental data. We analyse historical data, corrections applied to homogenized datasets, as well as the small number of parallel measurements from differentially-shielded thermometers, in order to better define the characteristics of the exposure bias. These characteristics are then used to identify potential instances of exposure bias in early instrumental temperature records. We consider differences in seasonal anomalies, which is a key feature of many exposure biases, as well as their geographical variation (focussing mostly, but not solely, on Europe). We analyse how these behave at stations where it is known that exposure bias has already been adjusted for (though perhaps not completely) versus those that have not been. We also make comparisons with proxy reconstructions of temperature as an independent reference that is not susceptible to the same biases as the early instrumental data.

This work forms part of the NERC-funded GloSAT project which is developing a global surface air temperature dataset starting in 1781. The ultimate aim of the work reported here is to refine the error associated with these biases, in order to improve the representation of the exposure bias in error models used for gridded instrumental temperature datasets.

How to cite: Wallis, E., Osborn, T., Taylor, M., Lister, D., and Jones, P.: Identifying exposure biases in early instrumental data, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-9944, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-9944, 2021.

EGU21-10399 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

State of the Art in Cup Anemometry

Amir A. S. Pirooz, Richard G.J. Flay, Richard Turner, and Cesar Azorin-Molina

Despite the great development of more accurate and sophisticated wind-measurement instruments, cup anemometers remain today the most widely used and popular anemometer in measuring wind speeds at meteorological stations and wind farms. In addition, almost all the available long-term wind speed time series across the world have been recorded by cup anemometers. Studying the response of cup anemometers and errors associated with their measurements, and also how the cup anemometer measurements are comparable with modern sensors, is of great importance, and can affect meteorological and climatological studies of long-term wind speed trends, and also wind energy estimations. 

Although cup anemometers are known for being robust and reliable, long-term field measurements of wind speeds by these wind sensors can be associated with errors and uncertainties affecting the quality of recorded data and subsequent analyses. When analysing wind speed data, it is essential to understand these errors and compensate for them and distinguish them from the real climate signals.

A comprehensive review on various aspects of anemometry, particularly cup anemometers, is presented in this paper. This review includes the different designs and theory developed from the invention of this wind-speed measuring system to very recent works, the response characteristics of anemometers, anemometer calibration procedures, field and wind-tunnel experiments on anemometers, etc. In addition, the different sources of errors and uncertainties are introduced and methods, including statistical, mathematical and experimental approaches, proposed to quantify and remedy the effects of these errors are presented. Lastly, several comparative studies that investigated the response characteristics of different types of cup anemometers and other anemometers are reviewed.

How to cite: S. Pirooz, A. A., Flay, R. G. J., Turner, R., and Azorin-Molina, C.: State of the Art in Cup Anemometry, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10399, 2021.

EGU21-10422 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Wind-Tunnel Setup for Investigating the Response Characteristics of Anemometers

Amir A. S. Pirooz, Richard G.J. Flay, Richard Turner, and Cesar Azorin-Molina

The study aims to outline the wind-tunnel setup and testing procedure in a currently ongoing project designed to compare the response characteristics of various anemometers widely used across the world during different historic periods. The variations of several parameters, including gust and peak factors, and turbulence intensities measured by the anemometers as a function of the averaging duration (i.e. gust duration), and turbulence intensity and wind speed of the incoming airflow will be investigated.

The outputs of the study will play an essential role in the understanding of historical wind data, and how to account for the changes in anemometers and gust duration in order to eliminate the breakpoints and shifts in wind speed time series, and to produce homogenised wind records.

The tests will be carried out in the boundary-layer wind tunnel at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. This boundary-layer wind tunnel is a closed-circuit wind tunnel with two fans, a maximum wind speed of 20 m s‒1, and a large cross-section of 3.6 m × 2.5 m (width × height), which makes the tunnel suitable for the proposed experiment. The calibration of the anemometers will be conducted in the empty wind tunnel, which has a relatively low turbulence intensity of about 1% – 1.5%. The calibration is carried out according to the recommendations of ASTM D5096-02 (2017) and using a 3D Cobra wind sensor as the reference.

Turbulence-inducing elements, such as grids and blocks, are used in the wind tunnel to replicate the random fluctuations of wind in nature, such that high turbulence intensities broadly replicate turbulence in urban areas, and low turbulence intensities are similar to those of exposed open-country and sea surface terrains.

Details of the calibration and testing procedures as well as analysing the measured data in the wind tunnel will be presented. In addition, the advantages and limitations of wind-tunnel experiments in studying anemometers compared with theoretical approaches and full-scale field measurements will be discussed. 

How to cite: S. Pirooz, A. A., Flay, R. G. J., Turner, R., and Azorin-Molina, C.: Wind-Tunnel Setup for Investigating the Response Characteristics of Anemometers, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10422, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10422, 2021.

EGU21-10859 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Multidecadal assessment of the FYRE Climate daily high-resolution surface reanalysis over France (1871-2012)

Jean-Philippe Vidal, Alexandre Devers, Claire Lauvernet, and Olivier Vannier

Surface observations are usually too few and far between to properly assess multidecadal variations at the local scale and characterize historical local extreme events at the same time. A data assimilation scheme has been recently presented by Devers et al. (2020) to assimilate daily observations of temperature and precipitation into downscaled reconstructions from a global extended reanalysis through an Ensemble Kalman fitting approach and derive high-resolution fields. Recent studies also showed that assimilating observations at high temporal resolution does not guarantee correct multidecadal variations. This work thus proposes (1) to apply this scheme over France and over the 1871–2012 period based on the SCOPE Climate reconstructions background dataset (Caillouet et al., 2019) and all available daily historical surface observations of temperature and precipitation, (2) to develop an assimilation scheme at the yearly time scale and to apply it over the same period and lastly, (3) to derive the FYRE Climate reanalysis, a 25-member ensemble hybrid dataset resulting from the daily and yearly assimilation schemes, spanning the whole 1871–2012 period at a daily and 8-km resolution over France. Assimilating daily observations only allows reconstructing accurately daily characteristics, but fails in reproducing robust multidecadal variations when compared to independent datasets. Compared to reference homogenized series, FYRE Climate clearly performs better than the SCOPE Climate background in terms of bias, error, and correlation, but also better than the Safran surface reanalysis over France (Vidal et al., 2010) available from 1958 onward only. FYRE Climate also succeeds in reconstructing both local extreme events and multidecadal variability. It is made available from http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4005573 (precipitation) and http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4006472 (temperature). Further details on FYRE Climate can be found in Devers et al. (2021).

Caillouet, L., Vidal, J.-P., Sauquet, E., Graff, B., Soubeyroux, J.-M. (2021) SCOPE Climate: a 142-year daily high-resolution ensemble meteorological reconstruction dataset over France. Earth System Science Data, 11, 241-260. https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-11-241-2019

Devers, A., Vidal, J.-P., Lauvernet, C., Graff, B., Vannier, O. (2020) A framework for high-resolution meteorological surface reanalysis through offline data assimilation in an ensemble of downscaled reconstructions. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 2020, 146, 153-17. https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3663

Devers, A., Vidal, J.-P., Lauvernet, C., Vannier, O. (2021) FYRE Climate: A high-resolution reanalysis of daily precipitation and temperature in France from 1871 to 2012. Climate of the Past Discussions, in review, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-2020-156

Vidal, J.-P., Martin, E., Franchistéguy, L., Baillon, M., Soubeyroux, J.-M. (2010) A 50-year high-resolution atmospheric reanalysis over France with the Safran system. International Journal of Climatology, 30, 1627-1644. https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.2003

How to cite: Vidal, J.-P., Devers, A., Lauvernet, C., and Vannier, O.: Multidecadal assessment of the FYRE Climate daily high-resolution surface reanalysis over France (1871-2012), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-10859, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-10859, 2021.

EGU21-12702 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

A global observation-based dataset of sub-daily precipitation indices

David Pritchard, Elizabeth Lewis, Hayley Fowler, Stephen Blenkinsop, and Anna Whitford

Short duration precipitation extremes can lead to severe flash flooding and destructive landslides. Yet many gaps remain in our understanding of these acute precipitation events, partly due to the lack of accessible and high quality sub-daily observational datasets available to researchers. To address this problem, the INTENSE project (leading the GEWEX Hydroclimatology Panel Cross-Cutting Project on Sub-Daily Extremes) has coordinated a major international effort to collate sub-daily precipitation observations from around the world. The resulting Global Sub-Daily Rainfall (GSDR) dataset contains hourly precipitation records from over 20,000 gauges globally. The quality of the raw data underpinning the GSDR dataset is variable, so an automated and wide-ranging quality control procedure has been developed and applied to the records. To facilitate research and other applications of the dataset, we have defined and calculated a novel set of sub-daily precipitation indices. These indices complement and extend the ETCCDI daily precipitation indices by characterising key aspects of shorter duration precipitation variability, including intensity, duration and frequency properties. Project partners and other collaborators continue to augment the resulting indices database by performing the calculations on their own observations and sharing these with the INTENSE project, with new contributors always welcome. This combined effort has led to an extensive observation-based climatology of various sub-daily precipitation characteristics (including extremes) across large parts of the world. These indices will be publicly available for as many gauges as possible, alongside a gridded dataset that also incorporates indices calculated for additional restricted-access gauge records.

How to cite: Pritchard, D., Lewis, E., Fowler, H., Blenkinsop, S., and Whitford, A.: A global observation-based dataset of sub-daily precipitation indices, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12702, 2021.

EGU21-13403 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Extreme temperatures analysis: A study for Campinas, Brazil

Guilherme Correia and Ana Maria Ávila

Extreme events such as heat waves have adverse effects on human health, especially on vulnerable groups, which can lead to deaths, thus they must be faced as a huge threat. Many studies show general mean temperature increase, notably, minimum temperatures. The scope of this work was to assess daily data of a historical series (1890-2018) available on the Instituto Agronômico de Campinas (IAC), in Campinas, using a suite of indices derived from daily temperature and formulated by the Expert Team on Climate Change Detection and Indices (ETCCDI) and evaluate trends. To compute the extreme indices RClimDex 1.1 was used. The significance test is based on a t  test, with a significance level of 95% (p-value<0,05). Temperature increase is undoubtedly through many indices, especially from 1980, as there is a continuous rise of the temperature. Annual mean maximum temperature rose from 26°C to 29°C, whereas many years consistently have more than 50 days with maximum temperatures as high as 31°C and more than 20% of the days within a year are beyond the 90th percentile of the daily maximum temperatures. Annual mean minimum temperature rose from 14°C to 18°C, whereas many years consistently have more than 150 days with minimum temperatures as high as 18°C and more than 30% of the days within a year are beyond the 90th percentile of the daily minimum temperatures. Therefore, results indicate the increase of minimum temperature is greater than the increase of maximum temperatures.

How to cite: Correia, G. and Ávila, A. M.: Extreme temperatures analysis: A study for Campinas, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-13403, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-13403, 2021.

EGU21-14270 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

How representative is global terrestrial wind speed from in-situ observations?

Lihong Zhou, Cesar Azorin-Molina, and Zhenzhong Zeng

Since long-term in-situ observations over land reflect to some extent the climatic conditions of the area where they are located, observed wind speed are used for many applications, e.g.: to estimate wind energy resources, to quantify the role of winds on evapotranspiration rates, or to assess the thermal response of lakes; among many others. However, it is not well-known whether site-specific station averages are representative of wind speed conditions in the corresponding areas; in fact, few studies have explored this so far. Here, we will investigate wind speed data from observation stations and reanalysis products. By comparing the relationships of the magnitude, inter-annual variability, and long-term trends in these two datasets at various spatiotemporal resolutions, e.g., 3⁰×3⁰, 5⁰×5⁰, continental and global scale, etc., we will better understand the representativeness of wind speed changes at in-situ stations in different regions. This study will help to further reveal the uncertainties in the representativeness of studies using station-based wind speed observations.

How to cite: Zhou, L., Azorin-Molina, C., and Zeng, Z.: How representative is global terrestrial wind speed from in-situ observations?, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14270, 2021.

EGU21-15496 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Mechanisms behind the precipitation increase in Norway

Kjersti Konstali and Asgeir Sorteberg

We use a dataset with observations of daily precipitation from 55 homogeneity tested stations in Norway over the period 1900-2019 available from MET-Norway. These observations show that precipitation in Norway has increased monotonically by 19% since 1900. Notably, over half of the overall increase was recorded within the decade of 1980-1990. To examine possible mechanisms behind the precipitation increase, we use a diagnostic model to separate the effects of changes in vertical velocity, temperature and relative humidity. We use vertical velocity, near-surface temperature and relative humidity from two reanalysis products, ECMWF’s ERA-20C and NOAA’s 20th Century Reanalysis. The model-based precipitation estimates capture the interannual variability as well as the long-term trend, but the absolute magnitude of precipitation is underestimated. Within our model, we find that the variability in vertical velocity chiefly determines the interannual variability and long-term trends. In fact, the trend in vertical velocities contributes with more than 75% of the total modelled trend in precipitation between 1900-2019, and more than 60% of the anomalies between 1980-1990. However, over the last decades (1979 to 2019), changes in temperature and relative humidity are the main contributors to the trend. Thus, different physical processes shape the trend at different times. We hypothesize that the strong precipitation increase in the 1980’s is linked to an unusual high number of low pressure systems reaching Norway from the North-Atlantic. In recent decades, direct effects of global warming (rising temperatures and hence increased water vapour content) are thought to be the main cause of the positive trend in precipitation over Norway. 

How to cite: Konstali, K. and Sorteberg, A.: Mechanisms behind the precipitation increase in Norway, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15496, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15496, 2021.

EGU21-15931 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Advances in the HadCRUT5 record of global near-surface temperatures since 1850

Colin Morice, John Kennedy, Nick Rayner, Jonathan Winn, Emma Hogan, Rachel Killick, Robert Dunn, Tim Osborn, Phil Jones, and Ian Simpson

The new HadCRUT5 data set combines meteorological station air temperature records with sea-surface temperature measurements in a data set of near-surface temperature anomalies from the year 1850 to present. Major developments in HadCRUT5 include: updates to underpinning observation data holdings; use of an updated assessment of the impacts of changing marine measurement methods; and adoption of a statistical gridding method to extend estimates into sparsely observed regions of the globe, such as the Arctic. The data are presented as a 200-member ensemble that spans the assessed uncertainty associated with adjustments for long-term observational biases, observing platform measurement errors and the interaction of observational sampling with gridding methods. The impacts of methodological changes in HadCRUT5 on diagnostics of the global climate will be discussed and compared to results derived from other state-of-the-art global data sets.

How to cite: Morice, C., Kennedy, J., Rayner, N., Winn, J., Hogan, E., Killick, R., Dunn, R., Osborn, T., Jones, P., and Simpson, I.: Advances in the HadCRUT5 record of global near-surface temperatures since 1850, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-15931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-15931, 2021.

EGU21-16099 | vPICO presentations | CL5.2.6

Sensitivity of segmentation of GNSS IWV time series and trend estimates to data properties

Khanh Ninh Nguyen, Annarosa Quarello, Olivier Bock, and Emilie Lebarbier

Homogenization is an important step to improve the quality of long-term observational data sets and estimate climatic trends. In this work, we use the GNSSseg/GNSSfast segmentation packages that were developed by Quarello et al., 2020, for the detection of abrupt changes in the mean of Integrated Water Vapour (IWV) data derived from GNSS measurements. The method works on the difference of the IWV time series (GNSS – reference) in order to cancel out the common climatic variations and enhance the discontinuities due to the inhomogeneities in the GNSS series. This segmentation method accounts for changes in the variance on fixed intervals (monthly) and a periodic bias (annual) due to representativeness differences between GNSS and the reference (in our case, a global atmospheric reanalysis). 
The goal of this study is to analyze the sensitivity of the segmentation method to the data properties, particularly the GNSS data processing method. Two reprocessed GNSS solutions are considered: IGS repro1, covering the period 1995-2010, and CODE REPRO2015 + OPER, covering the period 1994-2018. Next, the impact of the length of time series and missing data are investigated. Finally, the use of two different reference series is considered (ERA-Interim and ERA5 reanalyses).
The segmentation results are screened for outliers (multiple detections occurring within a distance of 80 days) and validated with respect to known equipment changes (from GNSS metadata). The impact of the data properties is analyzed by comparing the number and position of detected change-points and the fraction of validated change-points. The influence of the variance of the IWV difference series and the magnitude of the periodic bias is examined. Finally, the results are compared in terms of estimated linear trends taking the detected change-points into account.
From the multiple comparisons, we found that about 30 % of change points are similar when the GNSS processing method changed, while 60 % are similar when the CODE series is shortened to match the length of the repro1 series. These tests highlight that the segmentation results are processing-dependent and are affected by the length of the series. The impact of the data properties on the IWV trends and associated uncertainties are also quantified. Besides, it is important to note that the best segmentation result is found when the ERA5 reanalysis is used as a reference.

How to cite: Nguyen, K. N., Quarello, A., Bock, O., and Lebarbier, E.: Sensitivity of segmentation of GNSS IWV time series and trend estimates to data properties, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-16099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-16099, 2021.

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