𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
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Regional climate change in Portugal: precipitation variability associated with large-scale atmospheric circulation

✍ Scribed by Corte-Real, João; Qian, Budong; Xu, Hong


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
480 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0899-8418

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✦ Synopsis


Four major circulation patterns, associated with daily precipitation in Portugal, are classified from daily sea level pressure fields over the northeastern Atlantic and western Europe, based on the K-means clustering algorithm coupled with principal component analysis. A rainy pattern is clearly identified with a probability of rain of 74.6%, as well as two distinct dry patterns, one prevailing in summer and the other occurring frequently in winter; a blocking-like pattern with a probability of rain of 36.8% has also been identified. These patterns are quasi-stationary, normally persisting for 1 week and sometimes even for 1 month, especially the dry ones; they represent the principal weather regimes associated with precipitation in Portugal.

Interannual variations in monthly precipitation associated with the circulation patterns are also investigated; results show that these variations match fluctuations in the frequencies of occurrence of both the rainy and the dry patterns. The decreasing trend of March monthly rainfall in southern Portugal is closely related to corresponding trends in the frequencies of both the rainy pattern and the summer dry pattern. Long term trends are not significant either in other monthly rainfall sequences or in the frequencies of different circulation patterns. Interannual variations seem, in most months, to be quasi-periodic. Singular spectrum analysis (SSA) is performed on these sequences to detect quasi-periodic oscillations. Relationships between oscillations in rainfall and in frequencies of occurrence of circulation patterns are studied. Results show that four weather circulation patterns or weather regimes are important for investigating regional climate change in Portugal and its relationship with variability of large-scale atmospheric circulation.


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