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Detecting the human fingerprint in the summer 2022 West-Central European soil drought.

Authors :
Schumacher, Dominik L.
Zachariah, Mariam
Otto, Friederike
Barnes, Clair
Philip, Sjoukje
Kew, Sarah
Vahlberg, Maja
Singh, Roop
Heinrich, Dorothy
Arrighi, Julie
van Aalst, Maarten
Hauser, Mathias
Hirschi, Martin
Bessenbacher, Verena
Gudmundsson, Lukas
Beaudoing, Hiroko K.
Rodell, Matthew
Sihan Li
Wenchang Yang
Vecchi, Gabriel A.
Source :
Earth System Dynamics Discussions; 5/11/2023, p1-41, 41p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

In the 2022 summer, West-Central Europe and several other northern-hemisphere mid-latitude regions experienced substantial soil moisture deficits in the wake of precipitation shortages and elevated temperatures. Much of Europe has not witnessed a more severe soil drought since at least the mid-20th century, raising the question whether this is a manifestation of our warming climate. Here, we employ a well-established statistical approach to attribute the low 2022 summer soil moisture to human-induced climate change, using observation-driven soil moisture estimates and climate models. We find that in West-Central Europe, a June-August root-zone soil moisture drought such as in 2022 is expected to occur once in 20 years in the present climate, but would have occurred only about once per century during pre-industrial times. The entire northern extratropics show an even stronger global warming imprint with a 20-fold soil drought probability increase or higher, but we note that the underlying uncertainty is large. Reasons are manifold, but include the lack of direct soil moisture observations at the required spatiotemporal scales, the limitations of remotely sensed estimates, and the resulting need to simulate soil moisture with land surface models driven by meteorological data. Nevertheless, observationbased products indicate long-term declining summer soil moisture for both regions, and this tendency is likely fueled by regional warming, while no clear trends emerge for precipitation. Finally, our climate model analysis suggests that in a 2 °C world, 2022-like soil drought conditions would become twice as likely for West-Central Europe compared to today, and would take place nearly every year across the northern extratropics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21904995
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Earth System Dynamics Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172036047
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-717