BIBLIOS

  Sistema de Gestão de Referências Bibliográficas de Ciências

Modo Visitante (Login)
Need help?


Voltar

Detalhes Referência

Tipo
Artigos em Revista

Tipo de Documento
Artigo Completo

Título
Long-term warming and interannual variability contributions’ to marine heatwaves in the Mediterranean

Participantes na publicação
Amélie Simon (Author)
Carlos Pires (Author)
Dep. Engenharia Geográfica, Geofísica e Energia
Thomas L. Frölicher (Author)
Ana Russo (Author)
Dep. Engenharia Geográfica, Geofísica e Energia
IDL

Resumo
In the past 40 years, marine heatwaves (MHWs) have experienced a worldwide increase in duration, intensity, frequency and spatial extent. This trend has been particularly evident in the Mediterranean, where exceptional events were observed during the summers of 2022, 2018 and 2003. This study proposes a twofold analysis of MHWs in the Mediterranean, focusing on their statistical characteristics and physical causes. A satellite dataset is utilized to analyze MHWs via an index, called activity, which aggregates the occurrence, duration, intensity and spatial extent of events. Our results show that the trend toward more active summers for MHWs is strongest in the western Mediterranean basin and long-term warming is the main driver in the whole Mediterranean basin. We also show that in the western and Adriatic Mediterranean region, the increase of SST variability contributes about a third to the MHW activity long-term trend whereas in the central, eastern and Aegean basins, the variability of SST mostly acts to diminish this trend. Through principal component analysis (PCA) of MHW activity, we found that the three most severe summer MHW events in the Mediterranean occur at the same location where the overall trend is highest. Interannual variability increased MHW activity in 2022 around the Balearic Sea, in 2018 in the eastern basins and in 2003 in the central basins. A joint PCA revealed that the long-term trend in MHW activity co-varies with a positive geopotential height anomaly over the Mediterranean, which is consistent with the generation of atmospheric-driven MHWs and which, at the North Atlantic scale, resembles the positive phase of the summer East Atlantic. The additional interannual variability contribution to these three severe summers was associated with western warming and projected onto the positive phase of the summer North Atlantic Oscillation. The increase in MHW over the last 40 years is also associated in the western, central and Adriatic regions with increased downward short-wave radiation and in the eastern Mediterranean with decreased upward long-wave radiation. Increased upward latent heat flux partly compensated for the MHW long-term increase over the whole Mediterranean basin. The interannual variability of MHW activity is related in the western, central and Adriatic basins to increased downward sensible and decreased upward latent heat flux possibly due to warm and humid air intrusion.

Data de Submissão/Pedido
2023-04-23
Data de Aceitação
2023-10-16
Data de Publicação
2023-12

Instituição
UNIVERSIDADE DE LISBOA

Suporte
Weather and Climate Extremes

Identificadores da Publicação
ISSN - 2212-0947

Editora
Elsevier BV

Volume
42

Página Inicial
100619

Identificadores do Documento
DOI - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wace.2023.100619
URL - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wace.2023.100619


Exportar referência

APA
Amélie Simon, Carlos Pires, Thomas L. Frölicher, Ana Russo, (2023). Long-term warming and interannual variability contributions’ to marine heatwaves in the Mediterranean. Weather and Climate Extremes, 42, ISSN 2212-0947. eISSN . http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wace.2023.100619

IEEE
Amélie Simon, Carlos Pires, Thomas L. Frölicher, Ana Russo, "Long-term warming and interannual variability contributions’ to marine heatwaves in the Mediterranean" in Weather and Climate Extremes, vol. 42, 2023. 10.1016/j.wace.2023.100619

BIBTEX
@article{60493, author = {Amélie Simon and Carlos Pires and Thomas L. Frölicher and Ana Russo}, title = {Long-term warming and interannual variability contributions’ to marine heatwaves in the Mediterranean}, journal = {Weather and Climate Extremes}, year = 2023, volume = 42 }