4.5 Article

The Proportional Characteristics of Daytime and Nighttime Precipitation Based on Daily Precipitation in Huai River Basin, China

Journal

ATMOSPHERE
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/atmos13081287

Keywords

daytime and nighttime precipitation; precipitation extremes; copula; Huai River Basin

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFC3201104]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41907384, 52179013]
  3. Humanities and Social Science Fund of Ministry of Education of China [19YJCZH259]
  4. Huaishang Talent Foundation [42ZYQ00]
  5. Belt and Road Special Foundation of the State Key Laboratory of Hydrology-Water Resources and Hydraulic Engineering [2021491011]
  6. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province of China [1808085ME158, 2008085ME158]
  7. Key R&D Programof Anhui Province of China [202004a06020016]

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The proportions of daytime and nighttime precipitation in total precipitation are important for understanding the process of precipitation formation and improving precipitation data. This study found that nighttime precipitation slightly exceeded daytime precipitation, and precipitation intensity was more distinct in seasons with higher overall precipitation. Nighttime precipitation contributed more to torrential rainfall events than daytime precipitation.
The daytime and nighttime precipitation proportions of daily total precipitation (especially extreme daily precipitation) are important indicators that help to understand the process of precipitation formation, which in turn helps to evaluate and improve models and reanalysis precipitation data. In this study, we used the Huai River Basin (HRB) as a case to explore the daytime and nighttime precipitation proportions of daily total precipitation based on 135 meteorological stations during 1961-2018. The total, daytime, and nighttime precipitation showed zonal distributions with high and low values in the southern and northern parts of the basin, respectively. The nighttime precipitation was slightly greater than the daytime precipitation. With the increase in precipitation intensity, the seasonal cycles of the total, daytime, and nighttime precipitation were more distinct, and precipitation mainly occurred in summer. The annual range of precipitation differences between daytime and nighttime in wet seasons showed a downward trend in 1961-2003 followed by an upward trend in 2003-2018. This reversal of annual range of precipitation around 2003 may be related to the changes in annual range of convective precipitation differences between daytime and nighttime in wet seasons. The decrease of light precipitation mainly depended on the decrease of nighttime precipitation. The contributions of nighttime precipitation events to torrential precipitation events were greater than those of daytime precipitation. The days of extreme precipitation events accounted for a very low proportion of total precipitation days, but their precipitation amount accounted for relatively high proportions of total precipitation amount. Annual extreme precipitation amount showed a slightly upward trend, which was caused by the increased nighttime precipitation. Under extreme precipitation conditions, large proportions of daytime precipitation were mainly concentrated in the southeastern parts of the HRB, whereas large proportions of nighttime precipitation were mainly concentrated in the northwestern parts of the basin. The concurrent daytime and nighttime precipitation showed slightly increasing trends, especially in the southeastern part of the basin. With the increase in daytime and nighttime precipitation, the risk of concurrent precipitation extremes in the southern part of the basin increased (shorter return period means higher risk).

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