From: Phil Jones To: Kevin Trenberth Subject: Re: New versions Date: Thu Jul 28 09:37:18 2005 Cc: Susan Solomon Kevin/Susan, I'll look over 3.9. A quick look at the back references to sections which contain the detail summarized here, suggests that you've got the right level of section. I guess we could add a sentence to say that this/these are the principal section(s), but the whole of the x.x section is likely also relevant. I've added Susan in to show what we're doing. It might be appropriate for other chapters. Part of my reason was traceability, but also we are referring to subsequent sections in Chapters 4 and 5. The figures seem to be coming along well. Pdfs are also. I'll send another reminder about these out later today, when I've had one last look for a few of them. I'll attach section numbers as there are so few now. Cheers Phil The bulletted points and back references are below. · Global-mean surface temperatures show overall warming of 0.75ºC over the 19012004 period although rates of temperature rise are much greater after 1979. Both land surface air temperatures and SST show warming although land regions have warmed at a faster rate than the oceans for both hemispheres in the past few decades, consistent with the much greater mass and thermal inertia of the oceans. Some areas have not warmed in recent decades, and a few have cooled although not significantly. [3.2.2] · The warming of the climate is consistent with a widespread reduction in the number of frost days in mid-latitude regions. The latter is due to an earlier last day of frost in spring rather than a later start to the frost season in autumn. The increase in the number of daily warm extremes and reduction in cold extremes across over 70% of land regions studied have been most marked at night over the 1951-2003 period. The greater increase in nighttime as opposed to daytime temperatures has continued. [3.8.2.1] · Widespread (but not ubiquitous) decreases in continental DTR since the 1950s occur with increases in cloud amounts, as expected from the impact of cloud cover on solar heating of the surface. [3.2.2; 3.4.3] · The temperature increases are consistent with the observed nearly worldwide reduction in mountain glacier mass and extent. A few regions of the world where mountain glacier termini are determined by winter precipitation totals, as opposed to summer temperatures, do show some advances, but these are consistent with changes in circulation and associated increases in winter precipitation (e.g., southwestern Norway, parts of coastal Alaska, southern Chile and Fjordland of the South Island of New Zealand). Tropical ice caps in South America, Africa and Tibet have all shown remarkable declines in recent decades. If continued, some may disappear within the next 30 years. Reduction in mass of such glaciers depends on local heat budgets, which is not necessarily reflected in local temperature changes. The temperature records all show a slight warming, but nowhere near the magnitude required to explain the rapid demise of the many of the ice caps. [4.5] · Snow cover has decreased in many NH regions, particularly in the spring season, consistent with greater increases in spring as opposed to autumn temperatures in mid-latitude regions. The decrease is accompanied by increased active layer thickness above permafrost and decreased seasonally frozen ground depths. [3.3.2.3; 4.2.4, 4.8] · Sea-ice extents have decreased in the Arctic, particularly in the spring and summer seasons, and patterns of the changes are consistent with regions showing a temperature increase, although changes in winds are also a major factor. Decreases are found in the length of the freeze season of river and lake ice. [3.2.2.3; 4.3, 4.4, 5.3.3] · Surface temperature variability and trends since 1979 are consistent with those estimated by most analyses of satellite retrievals of lower-tropospheric temperatures, provided the latter are adequately adjusted for all issues of satellite drift, orbit decay, different satellites and stratospheric influence on the T2 records, and also with ERA-40 estimates of lower-tropospheric temperatures. The range from different datasets of global surface warming since 1979 is 0.15 to 0.18 compared to 0.12 to 0.19 K decade^-1 for MSU estimates of lower tropospheric temperatures. [3.4.1] · Stratospheric temperature estimates from radiosondes, satellites (T4) and reanalyses are in qualitative agreement recording a cooling of between 0.3 and 0.8ºC decade^-1 since 1979. Increasing evidence suggests increasing warming with altitude from 1979 to 2004 from the surface through much of the troposphere in the tropics, cooling in the stratosphere, and a higher tropopause, consistent with expectations from observed increased greenhouse gases and changes in stratospheric ozone. Over extratropical land, the larger warming at night is associated with larger surface temperature changes. [3.4.1] · Radiation changes at the top-of the atmosphere from the 1980s to 1990s, possibly ENSO related in part, appear to be associated with reductions in tropical cloud cover, and are linked to changes in the energy budget at the surface and in observed ocean heat content in a consistent way. [3.4.3; 3.4.4] · Surface specific humidity has also generally increased after 1976 in close association with higher temperatures over both land and ocean. Consistent with a warmer climate, total column water vapour has increased over the global oceans by 1.2 ± 0.3% from 1988 to 2004, consistent in patterns and amount with changes in SST and a fairly constant relative humidity. Upper tropospheric water vapour has also increased in ways such that relative humidity remains about constant, providing a major positive feedback to radiative forcing. [3.4.2] · Over land a strong negative correlation is observed between precipitation and surface temperature in summer and in low latitudes throughout the year, and areas that have become wetter, such as the eastern United States, have not warmed as much as other land areas. Increased precipitation is associated with increases in cloud and surface wetness, and thus increased evaporation. Although records are sparse, continental-scale estimates of pan evaporation show decreases, due to decreases in surface radiation associated with increases in clouds, changes in cloud properties, and increases in air pollution in different regions from 1970 to 1990. There is tentative evidence to suggest that this has reversed in recent years. The inferred enhanced evaporation and reduced temperature increase is physically consistent with enhanced latent versus sensible heat fluxes from the surface in wetter conditions. [3.3.5; 3.4.4.2] · Surface observations of cloud cover changes over land exhibit coherent variations on interannual to decadal time scales which are positively correlated with gauge-based precipitation measurements. [3.4.3] · Consistent with rising amounts of water vapour in the atmosphere, increases in the numbers of heavy precipitation events (e.g., 90/95^th percentile) have been reported from many land regions, even those where there has been a reduction in total precipitation. Increases have also been reported for rarer precipitation events (1 in 50 year return period), but only a few regions have sufficient data to assess such trends reliably. [3.4.2; 3.8.2.2] · Patterns of precipitation change are much more spatially- and seasonally-variable than temperature change, but where significant changes do occur they are consistent with measured changes in streamflow. [3.3.4] · Droughts have increased in various parts of the world. The regions where they have occurred seem to be determined largely by changes in SSTs, especially in the tropics, through changes in the atmospheric circulation and precipitation. Inferred enhanced evaporation and drying associated with warming and decreased precipitation are important factors in increases in drought. In the western United States, diminishing snow pack and subsequent summer soil moisture reductions have also been a factor. In Australia and Europe, direct links to warming have been inferred through the extreme nature of high temperatures and heat waves accompanying drought. [3.3.4, QACCS 3.3, 3.8.3, 4.x.x] · Changes in the freshwater balance of the Atlantic Ocean over the past four decades have been pronounced as freshening has occurred in the North Atlantic and also south of 25°S, while salinity has increased in the tropics and subtropics, especially in the upper 500 m. The implication is that there have been increases in moisture transport by the atmosphere from the subtropics to higher latitudes, in association with changes in atmospheric circulation, including the NAO, thereby increasing precipitation over the northern ocean and in adjacent land areas (as observed). [3.3.2, 3.3.3, 5.3.2, 5.5.3] · Changes in the large-scale atmospheric circulation are apparent. Increasing westerlies have been present in both hemispheres as enhanced annular modes. In the NH, the NAM and NAO change the flow from oceans to continents and are a major part of the wintertime observed change in storm tracks, precipitation and temperature patterns, especially over Europe and North Africa. In the SH, SAM changes, in association with the ozone hole, have been identified with recent contrasting trends of large warming in the Antarctic Peninsula, and cooling over interior Antarctica. [3.5, 3.6, 3.8.3] · The 19761977 climate shift toward more El Niños has affected Pacific rim countries and monsoons throughout the tropics. Over North America, ENSO and PNA-related changes appear to have led to contrasting changes across the continent, as the west has warmed more than the east, while the latter has become cloudier and wetter. [3.6, 3.7] · Variations in extratropical storminess are strongly associated mostly with changes in mean atmospheric circulation, such as changes and variations in ENSO, NAO, PDO, and SAM. Wind and significant wave height analysis support the reanalysis-based evidence for an increase in extratropical storm activity in the NH in recent decades. After the late 1990s, however, some of these variations seemed to change sign. [3.5, 3.6, 3.8.3.2] · Changes are observed to occur in the number, distribution and tracks of tropical storms that are clearly related to ENSO phases and to a slightly lesser extent to the AMO and QBO modulations. Increases in intensity and lifetimes of tropical storms since the 1970s are consistent with increases in SSTs and atmospheric water vapour. [3.8.3.1] · Sea level likely rose about 18±3 cm during the 20^th century, but increased 3.0±0.4 mm/year after 1992, when confidence increases from global altimetry measurements. During this period, glacier melt has increased ocean mass by order 1.0 mm/year, increases in ocean heat content and associated ocean expansion are estimated to contribute 1.6 mm/year, while changes in land water storage are uncertain but may have taken water out of the ocean. Isostatic rebound contributes about 0.3 mm/year. This near balance gives increased confidence that the observed sea level rise is a strong indicator of warming, and an integrator of the cumulative energy imbalance at the top of atmosphere.[4.5, 4.7, 4.9.8, 5.2, 5.5] At 23:47 27/07/2005, Kevin Trenberth wrote: Phil I placed new versions of the figure and text files on my ftp site. I implemented your suggestion of adding section numbers to the 3.9. I used the ones from the ZOD wrt other chapters. So they may change. I also added a small piece on freezing seasons on lakes and rivers that was mentioned in the last para but not in any bullets. You may like to comment on this as some are x.x, some are y.y.y and some are z.z.z.z. In the first case the whole section is really applicable and so mentioning each subsection does not seem worthwhile. Should we go to the z.z.z.z level, as that is not in the TOC? In doing this I found that two sections in 3.8 had very similar titles and so I changed that of 3.8.3 to explicitly say tropical and extratrtopical storms and extreme events, which are the 3 subsections. The Table of contents (TOC) is all up to date, and now corrected for one subsection that was mislabeled as level 2 instead of 3. Several figures have been revised. I am out tomorrow all day but Lisa tells me she is up to w in the references. So should have a complete new version on Friday. Hopefully several of the figures will be by upgraded then too. I have a new Fig 3.3.1 but can't work with it: something wrong with it, so I've asked Dave E for a different one. Main outstanding stuff is all waiting on Dave Easterling. I have requests in to Tom Karl on the 2 CCSP figures. Following my earlier email I have responses on Figs 3.2.3: now good, 3.4.6 I did, 3.5.2, and one from Groisman. So only 7 figures not in final form. I believe we have 74 figures in the sense that they are separate files. That includes counts of 1 for several multipanel files (like some T ones or the hurricane one), but 4 for some 4 panel ones like the ENSO one, where the files were all generated anew and independently. So the good part is that 67 of them are in great shape. We actually have 48 figures counting the 2 TAR ones that will be in 3.9, and 3 in the 3 QACCS. Cheers Kevin -- **************** Kevin E. Trenberth e-mail: trenbert@ucar.edu Climate Analysis Section, NCAR [1]www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/ P. O. Box 3000, (303) 497 1318 Boulder, CO 80307 (303) 497 1333 (fax) Street address: 1850 Table Mesa Drive, Boulder, CO 80303 Prof. Phil Jones Climatic Research Unit Telephone +44 (0) 1603 592090 School of Environmental Sciences Fax +44 (0) 1603 507784 University of East Anglia Norwich Email p.jones@uea.ac.uk NR4 7TJ UK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- References 1. http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/