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Atmospheric circulation influence on climatic trends in Europe: an analysis of circulation type classifications from the COST733 catalogue
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SYSNO ASEP 0437125 Druh ASEP J - Článek v odborném periodiku Zařazení RIV J - Článek v odborném periodiku Poddruh J Článek ve WOS Název Atmospheric circulation influence on climatic trends in Europe: an analysis of circulation type classifications from the COST733 catalogue Tvůrce(i) Cahynová, Monika (UEK-B) RID
Huth, R. (CZ)Zdroj.dok. International Journal of Climatology. - : Wiley - ISSN 0899-8418
Roč. 36, č. 7 (2016), s. 2743-2760Poč.str. 18 s. Jazyk dok. eng - angličtina Země vyd. GB - Velká Británie Klíč. slova atmospheric circulation ; classification ; circulation type ; climatic trends ; Europe ; COST733 Vědní obor RIV EH - Ekologie - společenstva CEP ED1.1.00/02.0073 GA MŠMT - Ministerstvo školství, mládeže a tělovýchovy Institucionální podpora RVO:67179843 - RVO:67179843 UT WOS 000377276300006 EID SCOPUS 84897360830 DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.4003 Anotace We studied the influence of changes in the frequency of atmospheric circulation types (CTs) on seasonal trends of daily maximum and minimum temperature and precipitation at several European stations in the period 1961–2000. The 24 circulation classifications used were created within the COST733cat database using eight classification methods; each applied on daily sea-level pressure fields over Europe and 11 smaller European domains in three variants with fixed numbers of types (9, 18, and 27). This allows us to study how different spatial scales of circulation and varying numbers of CTs affect the circulation–climate relationship. Significant trends in the frequency of CTs took place mainly in winter, and these clearly reflect the tendency towards positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation: the frequency of westerly types increased in the central latitudinal belt from the British Isles east to Ukraine, whereas the frequency of days with cyclonic circulation increased over Iceland and decreased in central Mediterranean. Seasonal temperature and precipitation trends can be only partly explained by the changing frequency of CTs, the link being the strongest in winter. In spring, summer, and autumn, the observed climatic trends are not forced by changes in the frequency of CTs but rather by changing climate within these types, which confirms the previously reported nonstationarities in the relationship between atmospheric circulation and local climate. There are marked differences among the results obtained using 24 parallel, fully comparable objective catalogues of CTs, but neither good or bad result nor any preferred classification method can be discerned. In winter and spring, small-scale circulation influences the observed climatic trends more than large-scale circulation on a majority of stations except for Iceland and Scandinavia. Classifications with more CTs usually explain a larger proportion of the observed climatic trends. Pracoviště Ústav výzkumu globální změny Kontakt Nikola Šviková, svikova.n@czechglobe.cz, Tel.: 511 192 268 Rok sběru 2017 Elektronická adresa http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/joc.4003/abstract
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