Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford, California, USA.
Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Sci Rep. 2018 Jan 17;8(1):1007. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-19288-z.
A critical question for climate mitigation and adaptation is to understand when and where the signal of changes to climate extremes have persistently emerged or will emerge from the background noise of climate variability. Here we show observational evidence that such persistent changes to temperature extremes have already occurred over large parts of the Earth. We further show that climate models forced with natural and anthropogenic historical forcings underestimate these changes. In particular, persistent changes have emerged in observations earlier and over a larger spatial extent than predicted by models. The delayed emergence in the models is linked to a combination of simulated change ('signal') that is weaker than observed, and simulated variability ('noise') that is greater than observed. Over regions where persistent changes had not occurred by the year 2000, we find that most of the observed signal-to-noise ratios lie within the 16-84% range of those simulated. Examination of simulations with and without anthropogenic forcings provides evidence that the observed changes are more likely to be anthropogenic than nature in origin. Our findings suggest that further changes to temperature extremes over parts of the Earth are likely to occur earlier than projected by the current climate models.
对于气候缓解和适应来说,一个关键问题是要了解气候变化极值的信号何时以及在何处从气候变率的背景噪声中持续出现或将会出现。在这里,我们展示了观测到的证据,表明温度极值的这种持续变化已经在地球的大部分地区发生。我们进一步表明,受自然和人为历史强迫影响的气候模型低估了这些变化。特别是,观测到的持续变化比模型预测的更早出现,而且空间范围更大。模型中延迟出现的原因是模拟变化(“信号”)比观测到的要弱,以及模拟变率(“噪声”)比观测到的要大。在 2000 年之前没有出现持续变化的地区,我们发现大多数观测到的信号与噪声比都在模拟的 16%至 84%范围内。对有和没有人为强迫的模拟的检验提供了证据,表明观测到的变化更有可能是人为的,而不是自然的起源。我们的研究结果表明,地球部分地区的温度极值将比当前气候模型预测的更早发生进一步的变化。