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Crucial Role of Black Sea Warming in Amplifying the 2012 Krymsk Precipitation Extreme

Summary/Abstract

Over the past 60 years, both average daily precipitation intensity and extreme precipitation have increased in many regions. Part of these changes, or even individual events, have been attributed to anthropogenic warming. Over the Black Sea and Mediterranean region, the potential for extreme summertime convective precipitation has grown alongside substantial sea surface temperature increase. A particularly devastating convective event experienced in that region was the July 2012 precipitation extreme near the Black Sea town of Krymsk. Here we study the effect of sea surface temperature (SST) increase on convective extremes within the region, taking the Krymsk event as a showcase example. We carry out ensemble sensitivity simulations with a convection-permitting atmospheric model and show the crucial role of SST increase in the extremeness of the event. The enhancement of lower tropospheric instability due to the current warmer Black Sea allows deep convection to be triggered, increasing simulated precipitation by more than 300% relative to simulations with SSTs characteristic of the early 1980s. A highly nonlinear precipitation response to incremental SST increase suggests that the Black Sea has exceeded a regional threshold for the intensification of convective extremes. The physical mechanism we identify indicates that Black Sea and Mediterranean coastal regions may face abrupt amplifications of convective precipitation under continued SST increase, and illustrates the limitations of thermodynamical bounds for estimating the temperature scaling of convective extremes.

Edmund P. Meredith et al., Crucial Role of Black Sea Warming in Amplifying the 2012 Krymsk Precipitation Extreme, 8 NATURE GEOSCIENCE 615, 615 (2015)

Link to Full Study
July 2015
Edmund P. Meredith, Vladimir A. Semenov, Douglas Maraun, Wonsun Park, Alexander V. Chernokulsky
Nature Geoscience
Peer-reviewed Study
Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea
Climate Change Attribution
Climate Change Attribution → Temperature
Climate Change Attribution → Oceans
Extreme Event Attribution
Extreme Event Attribution → Extreme Rainfall

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