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Does Regional Hydroclimate Change Scale Linearly With Global Warming?

Flavio Lehner, Sloan Coats

2021Geophysical Research Letters30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Many aspects of climate change scale linearly with global warming. However, nonlinear changes are possible, especially in the context of hydroclimate, and under emissions scenarios with stabilized global temperature, as aspired to by current climate targets. In CMIP5 and 6, a progressively larger land area shows nonlinear changes as a function of global warming when considering precipitation, evaporation, and soil moisture, with the latter showing nonlinearity over ∼50% of global land. Using ensemble simulations with the Community Earth System Model 1, in which individual forcing factors are held constant, we illustrate how nonadditive responses to anthropogenic greenhouse gases and industrial and fire‐related aerosols can yield complex soil moisture changes in certain regions. This complexity contributes to uncertainty in regional soil moisture projections and suggests that the timing of, as well as model response uncertainty to, future aerosol reductions will have significant impacts on regional hydroclimate change as global temperatures stabilize.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceClimatologyClimate changeGlobal warmingContext (archaeology)Greenhouse gasGlobal changeForcing (mathematics)PrecipitationClimate modelAtmospheric sciencesMoistureMeteorologyGeologyGeographyOceanographyPaleontologyClimate variability and modelsPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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