Trends in temperature and precipitation at high and low elevations in the main mountain ranges of the Iberian Peninsula (1894–2020): The Sierra Nevada and the Pyrenees
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sigro1, Javier; Cisneros1, Mercè2; Pérez Luque, Antonio Jesús; Pérez Martínez, María del Carmen; Vegas Vilarrubia, TeresaEditorial
Royal Meteorological Society
Materia
climate variability mountain climates precipitation
Fecha
2024-05-16Referencia bibliográfica
Sigro, J. et. al. International Journal of Climatology, 1–24. [https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.8487]
Patrocinador
Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge of Spain, Grant/Award Number: OAPN-2476-S/2017; “European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR” with a “Juan de la Cierva” fellowship programme, Grant/Award Number: JDC2022-050056-IResumen
This study describes temperature and precipitation trends in the two National
Parks located in the two highest mountain ranges on the Iberian Peninsula:
the Sierra Nevada (Sierra Nevada National Park, SN) and the Pyrenees
(Aigüestortes i Sant Maurici National Park, ASM). Special focus is placed on
analysing disparities between the lowlands and the highlands, as well as the
agreement between observational data and grid data (IBERIA01 and E-OBS).
For this purpose, a quality-controlled and homogeneity-adjusted database of
the daily maximum temperature, minimum temperature and precipitation
(SMADS database) has been generated. Regional trends in mean temperature
indicate that warming in ASM (0.17 C decade−1) was greater than in the Sierra
Nevada (SN) (0.13 C decade−1) in the longest joint period, 1930–2020. For
annual precipitation, the trends over the past nine decades were negative,
although not significantly. Only the summer in SN showed a significant negative
trend, which has intensified in recent decades to −13.4% decade−1 for
1975–2020. A parallel evolution was observed in the annual mean temperature
of the highlands (>1500 m) and lowlands (<1500 m) of ASM, with a common
trend of 0.17 C decade−1, while in SN negative elevation-dependent warming
was detected. Differences between lowlands and highlands were also noted in
precipitation trends in both mountain ranges: a positive trend in precipitation
was found in the lowlands while in the highlands practically null trends
(ASM) or decreasing precipitation trends (SN) were detected. The comparison
of the Spanish Mountain Adjusted Daily Series (SMADS) results with the IBERIA01
and E-OBS grid series yielded differences no greater than ±0.2 C decade−1. No notable differences were detected between the regional
trends calculated with observational series or with grid series. These results
worsened when the differences in the trends detected in the individual
observed temperature series were compared against the corresponding grid
series.