Nynke Hofstra and Mark New Oxford University Centre for the Environment Trends in extremes in the...

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Nynke Hofstra and Mark New

Oxford University Centre for the Environment

Trends in extremes in the ENSEMBLES daily gridded

observational datasets for Europe

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 intervalsHaylock 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

Experiment

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

Gamma distribution

α = 0.5

α = 1

α = 2 α = 3

α = 4

β = 0.5

β = 1

β =2 β = 5 β = 10

McSweeney 2007

Gamma distribution

• How well does the gamma distribution fit the data?

N=9051

Gamma distribution

• Dry day distribution and gamma parameters

Gamma distribution

α=0.6, β=4α=0.8, β=7

95th percentile

Gamma distribution

Trends in extremes

Trends in extremes

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!