Amplified seasonal range in precipitation minus evaporation

Warming of climate is intensifying the global water cycle, including the rate of fresh water flux between the atmosphere and surface, determined by precipitation minus evaporation (P−E). Surplus or deficit in fresh water impacts societies and ecosystems so it is important to monitor and understand h...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Research Letters
Main Author: Allan, Richard P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112694/
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112694/8/Allan_2023_Environ._Res._Lett._18_094004.pdf
https://centaur.reading.ac.uk/112694/1/Allan_P_E_ERL_rev1_clean.pdf
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Summary:Warming of climate is intensifying the global water cycle, including the rate of fresh water flux between the atmosphere and surface, determined by precipitation minus evaporation (P−E). Surplus or deficit in fresh water impacts societies and ecosystems so it is important to monitor and understand how and why P−E patterns and their seasonal range are changing across the globe. Here, annual maximum and minimum P−E and their changes are diagnosed globally over land and ocean in observations-based datasets and CMIP6 climate model experiments from 1950-2100. Seasonal minimum P−E is negative across much of the globe apart from the Arctic, mid-latitude oceans and the tropical warm pool. In the global mean, P−E maximum increases and P−E minimum decreases by around 3-4% per oC of global warming from 1995-2014 to 2080-2100 in the ensemble mean of an intermediate greenhouse gas emissions scenario. Over land, there is less coherence across datasets 1960-2020 but an increase in the seasonal range in P−E also emerges in future projections. Patterns of future changes in annual maximum and minimum P−E are qualitatively similar to present day trends with increases in maximum P−E in the equatorial belt and high latitude regions and decreases in the subtropical subsidence zones. This adds confidence to future projections of a more variable and extreme water cycle but also highlights uncertainties in this response over land.