MASS Seminar - Richard Seager (Columbia)
Date Time Location
April 23rd, 2012 12:00pm-1:00pm 54-915
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/res/div/ocp/people/seager/

Title: Examining the last few decades of global hydroclimate for evidence of anthropogenic change amidst natural variability

Abstract:
Climate models robustly predict that the deep tropics and mid-latitude-to-subpolar regions will moisten, and the subtropical dry zones both dry and expand, as a consequence of global warming driven by rising greenhouse gases. The models also predict that this transition to a more extreme climatological mean global hydroclimate should already be underway. Given the importance of these predictions it is an imperative that the climate science community assess whether there is evidence within the observational record that they are correct. This task is made difficult by the tremendous natural variability of the hydrological cycle on seasonal to multidecadal timescales. Here we will use instrumental observations, reanalyses, sea surface temperature forced atmosphere models and coupled model simulations, and a variety of methodologies, to attempt to separate global radiatively-forced hydroclimate change from ongoing natural variability. The results will be applied to explain trends and recent events both globally and in key regions such as Mexico, the United States and the Mediterranean. It is concluded that the signal of anthropogenic change is small compared to the amplitude of natural variability but that it is a discernible contributor. Globally the evidence reveals that radiatively-forced hydroclimate change is occurring with an amplitude and spatial pattern largely consistent with the predictions by IPCC AR4 models of hydroclimate change to date. However it will also be shown that the radiatively-forced component does not in and of itself provide a useful prediction of near term hydroclimate change because for many regions the amplitude of natural decadal variability is as large or larger. Useful predictions need to account for how natural variability may evolve as well as forced change.

Host: Marty Singh
Faculty Host: Alan Plumb