Diffenbaugh, Noah S., J.S. Pal, R.J. Trapp
and F. Giorgi
Fine-scale processes regulate the response
of extreme events to global climate change
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, 102(44), 15774-15778, 2005.
We find that extreme temperature and precipitation
events are likely to respond substantially to anthropogenically
enhanced greenhouse forcing and that fine-scale climate system
modifiers are likely to play a critical role in the net response.
At present, such events impact a wide variety of natural and human
systems, and future changes in their frequency and/or magnitude
could have dramatic ecological, economic, and sociological consequences.
Our results indicate that fine-scale snow albedo effects influence
the response of both hot and cold events and that peak increases
in extreme hot events are amplified by surface moisture feedbacks.
Likewise, we find that extreme precipitation is enhanced on the
lee side of rain shadows and over coastal areas dominated by convective
precipitation. We project substantial, spatially heterogeneous
increases in both hot and wet events over the contiguous United
States by the end of the next century, suggesting that consideration
of fine-scale processes is critical for accurate assessment of
local- and regional-scale vulnerability to climate change.
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