High temporal variability not trend dominates Mediterranean precipitation
降水
地中海气候
环境科学
气候学
自然地理学
地理
地质学
气象学
考古
作者
Sergio M. Vicente‐Serrano,Yves Tramblay,Fergus Reig,José Carlos González Hidalgo,Santiago Beguerı́a,Michele Brunetti,Ksenija Cindrić Kalin,Leonardo Patalen,Aleksandra Kržič,Piero Lionello,Miguel M. Lima,Ricardo M. Trigo,Ahmed El Kenawy,Ali Salem Eddenjal,Murat Türkeş,Aristeidis Koutroulis,Veronica Manara,Maurizio Maugeri,Wafae Badi,Shifa Mathbout
State-of-the-art climate models project a substantial decline in precipitation for the Mediterranean region in the future1. Supporting this notion, several studies based on observed precipitation data spanning recent decades have suggested a decrease in Mediterranean precipitation2–4, with some attributing a large fraction of this change to anthropogenic influences3,5. Conversely, certain researchers have underlined that Mediterranean precipitation exhibits considerable spatiotemporal variability driven by atmospheric circulation patterns6,7 maintaining stationarity over the long term8,9. These conflicting perspectives underscore the need for a comprehensive assessment of precipitation changes in this region, given the profound social, economic and environmental implications. Here we show that Mediterranean precipitation has largely remained stationary from 1871 to 2020, albeit with significant multi-decadal and interannual variability. This conclusion is based on the most comprehensive dataset available for the region, encompassing over 23,000 stations across 27 countries. While trends can be identified for some periods and subregions, our findings attribute these trends primarily to atmospheric dynamics, which would be mostly linked to internal variability. Furthermore, our assessment reconciles the observed precipitation trends with Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 model simulations, neither of which indicate a prevailing past precipitation trend in the region. The implications of our results extend to environmental, agricultural and water resources planning in one of the world's prominent climate change hotspots10. Our assessment of a 27-country weather station dataset in the Mediterranean region revealed long-term stability in precipitation over 150 years, along with substantial short-term variability on annual to decadal scales driven by atmospheric circulation; these findings align with the precipitation trends seen in CMIP6 models.