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Frequency of compound hot–dry weather extremes has significantly increased in Australia since 1889

Brian Collins

2021Journal of Agronomy and Crop Science27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract There is high confidence that climate change has increased the probability of concurrent temperature‐precipitation extremes, changed their spatial‐temporal variations and affected the relationships between drivers of such natural hazards. However, the extent of such changes has been less investigated in Australia. Daily data spanning the period 1889‐2019 (131 years) were extracted from SILO gridded dataset at 700 grid cells (1◦ × 1◦) across Australia to calculate annual and seasonal mean daily maximum temperature (MMT) and total precipitation (TPR). A nonparametric multivariate copula framework was adopted to estimate the return period of compound hot‐dry (CHD) events based on an ‘And’ hazard scenario (hotter than a threshold ‘And’ drier than a threshold). CHD extremes were defined as years with joint return periods of longer than 25 years calculated over the period 1889‐2019. Mann‐Kendall nonparametric tests were used to analyse trends in MMT and TPR as well as in the frequency of univariate and CHD extremes. Results showed a general cooling‐wetting trend over 1889‐1989. Significant increasing trends were detected over 1990‐2019 in the frequency and severity of hot extremes across the country while trends in dry extremes were mostly insignificant (and decreasing). A significant increase in the association between temperature and precipitation was identified at various temporal scales. While the frequency of CHD extremes was mostly stable over 1889‐1989, it significantly increased between 1990 and 2019 at 44% of studied grid cells, mostly located in the north, south‐east and southwest.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationEnvironmental scienceClimatologyMultivariate statisticsUnivariateCopula (linguistics)Return periodNonparametric statisticsAtmospheric sciencesGeographyMeteorologyMathematicsStatisticsEconometricsGeologyFlood mythArchaeologyClimate variability and modelsHydrology and Drought AnalysisMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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