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Downscaling future climate change projections over Puerto Rico using a non-hydrostatic atmospheric model
Authors:Amit Bhardwaj  Vasubandhu Misra  Akhilesh Mishra  Adrienne Wootten  Ryan Boyles  J H Bowden  Adam J Terando
Institution:1.Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Prediction Studies,Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;2.Florida Climate Institute,Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;3.Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science,Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;4.Center for Ocean-Atmospheric Science and Technology (COAST),Amity University Rajasthan,Jaipur,India;5.Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences,North Carolina State University,Raleigh,USA;6.Institute of the Environment,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,Chapel Hill,USA;7.U.S. Geological Survey,Southeast Climate Science Center,Raleigh,USA;8.Department of Applied Ecology,North Carolina State University,Raleigh,USA
Abstract:We present results from 20-year “high-resolution” regional climate model simulations of precipitation change for the sub-tropical island of Puerto Rico. The Japanese Meteorological Agency Non-Hydrostatic Model (NHM) operating at a 2-km grid resolution is nested inside the Regional Spectral Model (RSM) at 10-km grid resolution, which in turn is forced at the lateral boundaries by the Community Climate System Model (CCSM4). At this resolution, the climate change experiment allows for deep convection in model integrations, which is an important consideration for sub-tropical regions in general, and on islands with steep precipitation gradients in particular that strongly influence local ecological processes and the provision of ecosystem services. Projected precipitation change for this region of the Caribbean is simulated for the mid-twenty-first century (2041–2060) under the RCP8.5 climate-forcing scenario relative to the late twentieth century (1986–2005). The results show that by the mid-twenty-first century, there is an overall rainfall reduction over the island for all seasons compared to the recent climate but with diminished mid-summer drought (MSD) in the northwestern parts of the island. Importantly, extreme rainfall events on sub-daily and daily time scales also become slightly less frequent in the projected mid-twenty-first-century climate over most regions of the island.
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