4.7 Article

Anthropogenic Influence on the Diurnal Temperature Range since 1901

期刊

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
卷 35, 期 22, 页码 3583-3598

出版社

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0928.1

关键词

Anthropogenic effects; forcing; Climate change; Climatology

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. National Key R&D Program of China
  3. [42025503]
  4. [41775082]
  5. [2018YFA0605604]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study provides evidence of human influence on long-term changes in diurnal temperature range (DTR) over the past century, showing a general decrease in DTR globally, especially after the mid-1950s. The decrease in DTR is primarily attributed to different warming rates of daily maximum and daily minimum temperatures due to anthropogenic forcing, with greenhouse gas emissions playing the dominant role. The study also highlights the importance of understanding the impact of anthropogenic factors on DTR changes.
The diurnal temperature range (DTR) as measured by the difference between daily maximum (Tmax) and minimum (Tmin) temperatures is of great importance to human health, ecology, and agriculture. The link of its long-term change to anthropogenic forcing is still unclear. This study shows evidence of human influence on long-term changes in DTR over the globe, five continents, and China during the past century (1901-2014). Using multiple observational datasets, we find a general decrease in the DTR over most of the global land since 1901, especially after the mid-1950s. Changes in DTR are due to different warming rates of Tmax and Tmin in response to external forcings. The climate models that participated in phase 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) generally reproduce most of the changes in DTR, along with those in Tmax and Tmin. The models have underestimated the observed changes in DTR, however. A formal detection and attribution analysis shows that the anthropogenic forcing signal, including both greenhouse gas and aerosol emissions but dominated by the greenhouse gas emissions, is the main driver for these changes. The anthropogenic aerosol signal can be detected in Tmax and Tmin but not in DTR during the period of 1901-2014 over the globe and most continents. These indicate the observed decrease in DTR is not a simple response to anthropogenic aerosol emission. The natural signal is negligible in almost all the cases. Globally, anthropogenic influence is estimated to explain more than 90% of the observed changes in the three variables. In China, human influence is also clearly detected, although model simulated results on the regional scale have larger deviation. Significance StatementThe diurnal temperature range (DTR) is of great importance in many areas. We compare multiple observational datasets with the simulations by climate models that participated in the latest phase (phase 6) of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6), finding evidence of human influence on long-term changes in DTR over the past century (1901-2014) and robust evidence for the period since the early 1950s. The decrease in DTR as seen in the observational dataset is caused by different warming rates of daily maximum and daily minimum temperature in response to anthropogenic forcing, including both greenhouse gases and aerosols.

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