4.7 Article

Convective precipitation trends in the Spanish Mediterranean region

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosres.2021.105581

Keywords

Convective precipitation; Heavy rainfalls; Flash floods; Climate change; Mediterranean region

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO/AEI/FEDER) [CTM2017-83655-C2-2-R]
  2. INTERREG/POCTEFA [EFA210/16]

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This paper analyses the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of convective precipitation in the Mediterranean region of Spain. The results show that convective precipitation can contribute up to 16% of the total annual precipitation, but it is generated by a very small percentage of convective events. Moderately convective events are the most common, with summer being the most convective season.
This paper aims to analyse the distribution and temporal evolution of convective precipitation in the Mediterranean region of Spain. To accomplish this goal, we used 148 sets of 5-min rainfall rate data from the 1989-2015 period. The selected regions were the Jucar Hydrographic Confederation (CHJ) and the Internal Basins of Catalonia (CIC), which cover most of the autonomous communities of Catalonia and the Valencian Community (east Spain). The average 5-min intensity threshold of 35 mm/h and the beta parameter, defined as the ratio between convective precipitation versus total precipitation in any period, were used to characterise convective precipitation. Convective episodes were categorised as very convective, moderately convective, and slightly convective based on the beta value. After quality control, the series of 129 stations were clustered into homogeneous precipitation zones that also include beta as one of the variables of characterisation. The results show that convective precipitation can contribute to total annual precipitation by up to 16% on average, but it is generated by a very small percentage of convective events (between 3% and 6% across all the stations) in comparison with the total number of rainfall episodes. In this sense, moderately convective events are the most common, with a predominantly unimodal monthly distribution of beta, with summer the most convective season. Trends show a significant increase in precipitation, convective precipitation, and convective episodes in the CHJ. On the other hand, a positive trend of convective events is predominant in the CIC region, despite an overall precipitation decrease in the analysed period. These results are relevant given that extreme daily rainfall does not show a positive or significant trend, and they are in line with the impact of climate change on increased atmospheric instability and water vapour in the atmosphere. They highlight the need to work with sub-daily precipitation series in the case of the Mediterranean, which is mainly affected by flash floods.

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