Projected changes in temperature and precipitation over the United States, Central America and the Caribbean in CMIP6 GCMs
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Authors
Almazroui, Mansour
Islam, M. Nazrul
Saeed, Fahad
Saeed, Sajjad
Ismail, Muhammad
Azhar Ehsan, Muhammad
Diallo, Ismaila
O'Brien, Enda
Ashfaq, Moetasim
Martínez Castro, Daniel
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Abstract
The Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) dataset is used to examine projected changes in temperature and precipitation over the United States (U.S.), Central America and the Caribbean. The changes are computed using
an ensemble of 31 models for three future time slices (2021–2040, 2041–2060, and 2080–2099) relative to the reference
period (1995–2014) under three Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs; SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5, and SSP5-8.5). The CMIP6
ensemble reproduces the observed annual cycle and distribution of mean annual temperature and precipitation with biases
between − 0.93 and 1.27 °C and − 37.90 to 58.45%, respectively, for most of the region. However, modeled precipitation is
too large over the western and Midwestern U.S. during winter and spring and over the North American monsoon region in
summer, while too small over southern Central America. Temperature is projected to increase over the entire domain under
all three SSPs, by as much as 6 °C under SSP5-8.5, and with more pronounced increases in the northern latitudes over the
regions that receive snow in the present climate. Annual precipitation projections for the end of the twenty-frst century
have more uncertainty, as expected, and exhibit a meridional dipole-like pattern, with precipitation increasing by 10–30%
over much of the U.S. and decreasing by 10–40% over Central America and the Caribbean, especially over the monsoon
region. Seasonally, precipitation over the eastern and central subregions is projected to increase during winter and spring and
decrease during summer and autumn. Over the monsoon region and Central America, precipitation is projected to decrease
in all seasons except autumn. The analysis was repeated on a subset of 9 models with the best performance in the reference
period; however, no signifcant diference was found, suggesting that model bias is not strongly infuencing the projections.
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Keywords
Climate change, CMIP6, Temperature, Precipitation, United States, Central America, Caribbean
Citation
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s41748-021-00199-5