4.7 Article

Impact of ocean-atmosphere coupling on present and future Ko?ppen-Geiger climate classification in Europe

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH
Volume 275, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosres.2022.106223

Keywords

Climate change; Climate classification; Regional climate model; Ocean-atmosphere coupling

Funding

  1. Alba de la Vara - Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [CGL2017-89583-R]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy's Program for Climate Model Diagnosis
  3. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
  4. Spanish State Research Agency
  5. European Regional Development Fund [CGL2017-89583-R]
  6. Alcala University project [CGL2017-89583-R]
  7. [PIUAH21/CC-058]

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The effect of air-sea coupling on the European climate simulation is evaluated using a climate type classification. The simulations show that the coupled model captures the observed climate type distributions reasonably well, and also reveals the changes in climate type distribution under future scenarios. Coupling leads to colder climate types in certain regions and drier climates in specific areas. By the end of the 21st century, the climate type distribution changes in more than 50% of the domain, with coupled simulations showing larger changes compared to uncoupled simulations.
The effect of air-sea coupling in the simulation of the European climate is assessed through a climate type classification that uses surface temperature and precipitation from a regional atmosphere-ocean coupled model and from its atmospheric component. The atmospheric setup in both models is the same, differing only in the representation of the oceanic fields. The simulations cover the present and future-time climate under the RCP8.5 CMIP5 scenario. Climate type distributions obtained from both coupled and uncoupled simulations are similar to those obtained from ERA5 for the 1976-2005 period. Both models simulate colder climate types for present-time in southern and northeastern regions compared to ERA5, possibly due to a weaker influence of the Atlantic circulation, and drier climate types in some western Mediterranean areas. Also, for present-time coupling leads to more humid winters (relatively drier summers) in some zones of north Spain and south France, and drier climates in some western Mediterranean spots. Based on simulations with these models under the RCP8.5 scenario, we find that by the end of the 21st century (2070-2099) the climate type distribution changes in more than 50% of the domain. While both models project the reduction of regions with cold climate types and the expansion of those with hot summers and hot arid climate types, these changes affect a larger area in the coupled simulation. These differences may be related to a drier signal in the coupled simulation, especially during summer, due to the influence of colder surface water in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Using a climate classification to evaluate the annual cycles of the simulated temperature and precipitation data provides a novel insight into the impact of air-ocean coupling on the representation of the climate, and consequently into the simulated impact on ecosystems and human activities in Europe.

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