4.7 Article

Dynamical Downscaling of the Climate for the Hawaiian Islands. Part II: Projection for the Late Twenty-First Century

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 29, Issue 23, Pages 8333-8354

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0038.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NOAA Pacific RISA program from East-West Center to the University of Hawaii
  2. Department of Interior Pacific Islands Climate Science Center through the U.S. Geological Survey [G12AC20501, G13AC00363]
  3. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service [12200AJ022]
  4. Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)

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A 20-yr simulation with a fine-resolution regional atmospheric model for projected late twenty-first-century conditions in Hawaii is presented. The pseudo-global-warming method is employed, and the boundary conditions are based on a multimodel mean of projections made with global coupled models run with a moderate greenhouse gas emissions scenario. Results show that surface air temperature over land increases similar to 2 degrees-4 degrees C with the greatest warming at the highest topographic heights. A modest tendency for the warming to be larger on the leeward sides of the major islands is also apparent. Climatological rainfall is projected to change up to similar to 25% at many locations. The currently wet windward sides of the major islands will have more clouds and receive more rainfall, while the currently dry leeward sides will generally have even less clouds and rainfall. The average trade wind inversion-base height and the mean marine boundary layer cloud heights are projected to exhibit only small changes. However, the frequency of days with clearly defined trade wind inversions is predicted to increase substantially (similar to 83% to similar to 91%). The extreme rainfall events are projected to increase significantly. An analysis of the model's moisture budget in the lower troposphere shows that the increased mean rainfall on the windward sides of the islands is largely attributable to increased boundary layer moisture in the warmer climate. Rainfall changes attributable to mean low-level circulation changes are modest in comparison.

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