Widespread persistent changes to temperature extremes occurred earlier than predicted.

Chao Li, Yuanyuan Fang, Ken Caldeira, Xuebin Zhang, Noah S Diffenbaugh, Anna M Michalak
Author Information
  1. Chao Li: Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA. chaoli@uvic.ca.
  2. Yuanyuan Fang: Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA. ORCID
  3. Ken Caldeira: Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA.
  4. Xuebin Zhang: Climate Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
  5. Noah S Diffenbaugh: Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA. ORCID
  6. Anna M Michalak: Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA.

Abstract

A critical question for climate mitigation and adaptation is to understand when and where the signal of changes to climate extremes have persistently emerged or will emerge from the background noise of climate variability. Here we show observational evidence that such persistent changes to temperature extremes have already occurred over large parts of the Earth. We further show that climate models forced with natural and anthropogenic historical forcings underestimate these changes. In particular, persistent changes have emerged in observations earlier and over a larger spatial extent than predicted by models. The delayed emergence in the models is linked to a combination of simulated change ('signal') that is weaker than observed, and simulated variability ('noise') that is greater than observed. Over regions where persistent changes had not occurred by the year 2000, we find that most of the observed signal-to-noise ratios lie within the 16-84% range of those simulated. Examination of simulations with and without anthropogenic forcings provides evidence that the observed changes are more likely to be anthropogenic than nature in origin. Our findings suggest that further changes to temperature extremes over parts of the Earth are likely to occur earlier than projected by the current climate models.

References

  1. Nature. 2014 Jul 3;511(7507):E3-5 [PMID: 24990757]
  2. Clim Change. 2011 Aug 1;107(3-4):615-624 [PMID: 22707810]
  3. J Geophys Res Atmos. 2015 Apr 16;120(7):2808-2818 [PMID: 26042192]
  4. Sci Rep. 2014 Nov 06;4:6929 [PMID: 25373416]
  5. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 May 9;114(19):4881-4886 [PMID: 28439005]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0changesclimateextremespersistentmodelsobservedtemperatureoccurredanthropogenicearliersimulatedemergedvariabilityshowevidencepartsEarthforcingspredictedlikelycriticalquestionmitigationadaptationunderstandsignalpersistentlywillemergebackgroundnoiseobservationalalreadylargeforcednaturalhistoricalunderestimateparticularobservationslargerspatialextentdelayedemergencelinkedcombinationchange'signal'weaker'noise'greaterregionsyear2000findsignal-to-noiseratiosliewithin16-84%rangeExaminationsimulationswithoutprovidesnatureoriginfindingssuggestoccurprojectedcurrentWidespread

Similar Articles

Cited By