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AN UPDATED REVIEW ON RECENT TRENDS IN OBSERVATIONAL SURFACE ATMOSPHERIC VARIABLES AND THEIR EXTREMES OVER SPAIN

Journal

CUADERNOS DE INVESTIGACION GEOGRAFICA
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 209-232

Publisher

UNIV RIOJA, SERV PUBLICACIONES
DOI: 10.18172/cig.3134

Keywords

climate variability; precipitation; air temperature; solar radiation; wind speed; atmospheric evaporative demand; drought; Spain

Funding

  1. Red de variabilidad y cambio climatico RECLIM - Spanish Commission of Science and Technology [CGL2014-517221REDT]
  2. FEDER
  3. Demonstration and validation of innovative methodology for regional climate change adaptation in the Mediterranean area (LIFE MEDACC) [LIFE12 ENV/ES/000536-]
  4. LIFE programme of the European Commission
  5. IMDROFLOOD - Water Works
  6. European Commission
  7. [PCIN-2015-220]
  8. [CGL201452135-C03-01]

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This article reviews the state-of-the-art findings on recent trends in observed atmospheric variables and their extremes in Spain. Our study screened peer-reviewed articles, published within the last decade, on recent climate variability in Spain, with a particular focus on a range of the essential atmospheric variables. The review focusses on the recent evolution of precipitation and air temperature, but also on other meteorological variables such as solar radiation, wind speed, surface humidity and evapotranspiration. While this review highlights results on changes in the mean state of climate in Spain, it also gives equal attention to findings on extreme weather events like rainstorms, heat waves and droughts. A detailed review of studies focusing on recent changes in the surface climate of Spain revealed some key findings. Studies demonstrate an overall increase of solar radiation since the 1980s. A similar behaviour was observed for surface air temperature since the 1960s, on the order of +0.3 degrees C decade(-1), with rapid warming rates during summer. Different seasonal trend patterns of wind speed were noted over Spain, with declines in winter-spring and increases in summer-autumn. A remarkable decrease (-5%) in relative humidity was observed from 1961 to 2011. For precipitation, studies suggested a strong variability over both space and time, with a moderate decrease of the annual total precipitation. In accordance with changes in the mean conditions of climate, studies of extreme weather events stressed a notable warming in warm extremes, while changes in cold extremes were generally insignificant.

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