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Explore trends in extreme climatic data for Europe using ENSEMBLES gridded datasets from 1950-2006, focusing on precipitation and temperature extremes. Understand the impact of station density on data distribution and trends.
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Trends in extremes in the ENSEMBLES daily gridded observational datasets for Europe Nynke Hofstra and Mark New Oxford University Centre for the Environment
ENSEMBLES dataset • Daily dataset • Europe • 1950-2006 • Precipitation and mean, minimum and maximum temperature • Four different RCM grids • Kriging interpolation method for anomalies, Thin Plate Splines for monthly totals/means • 95% confidence intervals Haylock et al. Submitted to JGR
Introduction • How can this dataset be used for comparison with extremes of RCM output • Required: ‘true’ areal averages
Introduction • Several ways to calculate ‘true’ areal averages: • Interpolation of stations within grid (e.g. Huntingford et al. 2003) • Osborn / McSweeney (1997, 2007) method using inter-station correlation • More focused on extremes: • Method of Booij (2002) • Areal Reduction Factors, like Fowler et al. (2005) • But not enough station data available
Introduction • Variance of the areal average influenced by amount of stations used • Density of station network differs in time and space
Introduction Haylock et al. (submitted JGR) Klok and Klein Tank (submitted Int. J. Climatol.)
Objective • Understand what the influence of station density is on the distribution and trends in extremes of gridded data • Focus: • Precipitation • Gamma distribution • Extreme precipitation trends
Contents • Experiment • Gamma distribution results • Trends in extremes results • Conclusions so far • Further questions and applications
Experiment • Similar setup to interpolation done for ENSEMBLES dataset • One grid with 7 stations in or nearby • 252 stations with 70% or more data available within a 450 km search radius
Experiment • Calculate ‘true’ areal average of 7 stations • Use Angular Distance Weighting (ADW) interpolation of • 100 random combinations of 4 – 50 stations • all stations • First interpolate to 0.1 degree grid, then average over 0.22 degree grid • ADW uses 10 stations with highest standardised weights and needs minimum 4 stations for the interpolation
Experiment • Calculate the parameters of the gamma distribution • Using Thom (1958) maximum likelihood method • Calculate linear trends in extreme indices • Using fclimdex programme
α = 0.5 α = 1 α = 2 α = 3 α = 4 β = 0.5 β = 1 β =2 β = 5 β = 10 Gamma distribution McSweeney 2007
N=9051 Gamma distribution • How well does the gamma distribution fit the data?
Gamma distribution • Dry day distribution and gamma parameters
Gamma distribution 95th percentile α=0.6, β=4 α=0.8, β=7
Conclusions so far • Gamma scale parameter smaller for interpolated values • Smoothing • Small differences between interpolated and ‘true’ • Small differences using 4 or 50 stations for the interpolation
Conclusions so far • Trend in interpolated values larger than in station values • Small differences using 4 or 50 stations for the interpolation • It seems that local trend is picked up even if the amount of stations used for the interpolation is small
Further questions and applications • Is the smoothing that we have observed over-smoothing? • What is the distance to the closest station for all combinations of stations? • What happens to the trend of the grid value if only stations with a negative trend are used? • Split the study into two parts: interpolation to 0.1 degree grid and averaging to 0.22 degree grid • Do a similar experiment for minimum and maximum temperature
Thank you! Nynke Hofstra Oxford University Centre for the Environment nynke.hofstra@ouce.ox.ac.uk Questions, ideas and remarks very welcome!