4.7 Article

More extreme marine heatwaves in the China Seas during the global warming hiatus

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ab28bc

Keywords

marine heatwave; sea surface temperature; global warming hiatus; China seas

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41706020]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC1404700, 2018YFA0605603]

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Based on the satellite-derived global daily sea surface temperature (SST) data set with high resolution (0.25 degrees by 0.25 degrees), we analyzed changes in annual mean SST and extreme SSTs over the China Seas since 1982. Results show that the annual mean SST in the China Seas has experienced a remarkable declining trend during the global warming hiatus (1998-2013), which was dominated by the striking cooling of SST in boreal winter. Despite annual mean SST experienced warming hiatus after 1998, the regional averaged SST for 1998-2013 was still 0.5 degrees Cabove that for 1982-1997. The statistical distributions show that there are not only significant warmer climate shift in annual mean SSTs but also in annual extreme hot SSTs and cold SSTs. These changes can increase the likelihood of extreme oceanic warming events, known as marine heat waves (MHWs). Further analyses reveal that, from 1982 to present, the MHW frequency increases at a rate of 1.13 events per decade, 2.5 times the global mean rate. For the period 1998-2013, the MHWs in the China Sea has never decreased in both of the frequency and intensity but has already become more frequent, longer duration and more intense than those metrics of MHWs during 1982-1997.

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