North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective
In the southwestern United States, the North American monsoon (NAM) is the main driver of severe weather and accounts for nearly half the annual precipitation. How the monsoon has behaved in the past and how it will change in the future is a question of major importance for natural resource manageme...
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The University of Arizona.
2014
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/338900 |
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-338900 |
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Low-frequency variability NARCCAP North American monsoon Paleoclimate Tree-ring chronologies Climate change Atmospheric Sciences |
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Low-frequency variability NARCCAP North American monsoon Paleoclimate Tree-ring chronologies Climate change Atmospheric Sciences Carrillo Cruz, Carlos Mauricio North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
description |
In the southwestern United States, the North American monsoon (NAM) is the main driver of severe weather and accounts for nearly half the annual precipitation. How the monsoon has behaved in the past and how it will change in the future is a question of major importance for natural resource management and infrastructural planning. In this dissertation, I present the results of three studies that have investigated North American monsoon variability and change from the perspective of paleoclimate records, future climate change projections, and simulation of the low-frequency variability with the longest retrospective atmospheric reanalysis. In the first study, a monsoon-sensitive network of tree-ring chronologies is evaluated within its ability to reproduce NAM variability during the past four centuries. Matrix methods are used to detect the low-frequency spatiotemporal variability. The treering chronologies can reasonable characterizes the dominant modes of NAM climate variability. The monsoon tree-ring network is able to reproduce the interannual variability of cool and warm season precipitation, in a manner similar to the period of the instrumental record. Earlywood and latewood adjusted chronologies reveal low frequency climate variability at decadal and longer timescales that is beyond the ability of the instrumental record to temporally well resolve. This low-frequency climate variability seems to be part of a much larger cycle that coincides with the occurrence of multiyear persistent droughts. In the second study, we consider the modes of natural climate variability identified in the previous study to objectively assess the degree of physical uncertainty in climate change projections for NAM from Regional Climate Models (RCMs) used in the North American Regional Climate Change Assessment Program (NARCCAP). Climate change projection models are evaluated mainly on their ability to represent warm season driven by quasi-stationary Rossby wave trains and El Niño Southern Oscillation – Pacific Decadal Variability (ENSO-PDV). It is concluded that use of the NARCCAP model ensemble mean for NAM climate projections is probably not suitable. NARCCAP RCMs are largely a slave to their driving global models and their error in the specification of large-scale atmospheric circulation. Only one out of eight NARCCAP RCMs has a reasonable representation of the seasonal cycle of monsoon precipitation and ENSOdriven interannual variability in both the 20th and 21st centuries. No decadal variability was observed in any of the NARCCAP RCMs. In the third study, the low-frequency drought signal found with tree-ring chronologies is further explored within the framework of a regional climate modeling. Version 2 of the Twentieth-Century Reanalysis (DD-20CR) is dynamically downscaled over a contiguous U.S.-Mexico domain. Statistic analysis of the DD-20CR suggests that the low-frequency drought signal in the Southwest is driven by atmospheric circulation changes on global to continental scales that affect precipitation in Central American as well. DD-20CR reproduces the spatial patterns of precipitation associated with climate variability at decadal and longer timescales in a manner that compares well with observational records and tree-ring chronologies. Low-frequency climate variability is therefore likely responsible for the multiyear persistent droughts in the last four centuries, as independently evaluated from the tree-ring monsoon-sensitive network. |
author2 |
Castro, Christopher L. |
author_facet |
Castro, Christopher L. Carrillo Cruz, Carlos Mauricio |
author |
Carrillo Cruz, Carlos Mauricio |
author_sort |
Carrillo Cruz, Carlos Mauricio |
title |
North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
title_short |
North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
title_full |
North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
title_fullStr |
North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
title_full_unstemmed |
North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective |
title_sort |
north american monsoon variability from paleoclimate era to climate change projection: a multiple dataset perspective |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/338900 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT carrillocruzcarlosmauricio northamericanmonsoonvariabilityfrompaleoclimateeratoclimatechangeprojectionamultipledatasetperspective |
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1718107769105547264 |
spelling |
ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3389002015-10-23T05:35:47Z North American Monsoon Variability from Paleoclimate Era to Climate Change Projection: A Multiple Dataset Perspective Carrillo Cruz, Carlos Mauricio Castro, Christopher L. Castro, Christopher L. Woodhouse, Connie A. Garfin, Gregg Dominguez, Francina Low-frequency variability NARCCAP North American monsoon Paleoclimate Tree-ring chronologies Climate change Atmospheric Sciences In the southwestern United States, the North American monsoon (NAM) is the main driver of severe weather and accounts for nearly half the annual precipitation. How the monsoon has behaved in the past and how it will change in the future is a question of major importance for natural resource management and infrastructural planning. In this dissertation, I present the results of three studies that have investigated North American monsoon variability and change from the perspective of paleoclimate records, future climate change projections, and simulation of the low-frequency variability with the longest retrospective atmospheric reanalysis. In the first study, a monsoon-sensitive network of tree-ring chronologies is evaluated within its ability to reproduce NAM variability during the past four centuries. Matrix methods are used to detect the low-frequency spatiotemporal variability. The treering chronologies can reasonable characterizes the dominant modes of NAM climate variability. The monsoon tree-ring network is able to reproduce the interannual variability of cool and warm season precipitation, in a manner similar to the period of the instrumental record. Earlywood and latewood adjusted chronologies reveal low frequency climate variability at decadal and longer timescales that is beyond the ability of the instrumental record to temporally well resolve. This low-frequency climate variability seems to be part of a much larger cycle that coincides with the occurrence of multiyear persistent droughts. In the second study, we consider the modes of natural climate variability identified in the previous study to objectively assess the degree of physical uncertainty in climate change projections for NAM from Regional Climate Models (RCMs) used in the North American Regional Climate Change Assessment Program (NARCCAP). Climate change projection models are evaluated mainly on their ability to represent warm season driven by quasi-stationary Rossby wave trains and El Niño Southern Oscillation – Pacific Decadal Variability (ENSO-PDV). It is concluded that use of the NARCCAP model ensemble mean for NAM climate projections is probably not suitable. NARCCAP RCMs are largely a slave to their driving global models and their error in the specification of large-scale atmospheric circulation. Only one out of eight NARCCAP RCMs has a reasonable representation of the seasonal cycle of monsoon precipitation and ENSOdriven interannual variability in both the 20th and 21st centuries. No decadal variability was observed in any of the NARCCAP RCMs. In the third study, the low-frequency drought signal found with tree-ring chronologies is further explored within the framework of a regional climate modeling. Version 2 of the Twentieth-Century Reanalysis (DD-20CR) is dynamically downscaled over a contiguous U.S.-Mexico domain. Statistic analysis of the DD-20CR suggests that the low-frequency drought signal in the Southwest is driven by atmospheric circulation changes on global to continental scales that affect precipitation in Central American as well. DD-20CR reproduces the spatial patterns of precipitation associated with climate variability at decadal and longer timescales in a manner that compares well with observational records and tree-ring chronologies. Low-frequency climate variability is therefore likely responsible for the multiyear persistent droughts in the last four centuries, as independently evaluated from the tree-ring monsoon-sensitive network. 2014 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/338900 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |