Attributing decadal climate variability in coastal sea-level trends

被引:4
|
作者
Royston, Sam [1 ]
Bingham, Rory J. [1 ]
Bamber, Jonathan L. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Bristol, Avon, England
[2] Tech Univ Munich, AI4EO, Munich, Germany
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
RISE; IMPACT; BASIN;
D O I
10.5194/os-18-1093-2022
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Decadal sea-level variability masks longer-term changes due to natural and anthropogenic drivers in short-duration records and increases uncertainty in trend and acceleration estimates. When making regional coastal management and adaptation decisions, it is important to understand the drivers of these changes to account for periods of reduced or enhanced sea-level change. The variance in decadal sea-level trends about the global mean is quantified and mapped around the global coastlines of the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans from historical CMIP6 runs and a high-resolution ocean model forced by reanalysis data. We reconstruct coastal, sea-level trends via linear relationships with climate mode and oceanographic indices. Using this approach, more than one-third of the variability in decadal sea-level trends can be explained by climate indices at 24.6 % to 73.1 % of grid cells located within 25 km of a coast in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans. At 10.9 % of the world's coastline, climate variability explains over two-thirds of the decadal sea-level trend. By investigating the steric, manometric, and gravitational components of sea-level trend independently, it is apparent that much of the coastal ocean variability is dominated by the manometric signal, the consequence of the open-ocean steric signal propagating onto the continental shelf. Additionally, decadal variability in the gravitational, rotational, and solid-Earth deformation (GRD) signal should not be ignored in the total. There are locations such as the Persian Gulf and African west coast where decadal sea-level variability is historically small that are susceptible to future changes in hydrology and/or ice mass changes that drive intensified regional GRD sea-level change above the global mean. The magnitude of variance explainable by climate modes quantified in this study indicates an enhanced uncertainty in projections of short- to mid-term regional sea-level trend.
引用
收藏
页码:1093 / 1107
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] SEA-LEVEL FLUCTUATIONS IN A COASTAL LAGOON
    WONG, KC
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 1986, 22 (06) : 739 - 752
  • [32] Sea-Level Rise and Coastal Wetlands
    Brian Blankespoor
    Susmita Dasgupta
    Benoit Laplante
    AMBIO, 2014, 43 : 996 - 1005
  • [33] Sea-Level Rise and Coastal Wetlands
    Blankespoor, Brian
    Dasgupta, Susmita
    Laplante, Benoit
    AMBIO, 2014, 43 (08) : 996 - 1005
  • [34] SEA-LEVEL RISE OR COASTAL SUBSIDENCE
    STEWART, RW
    ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN, 1989, 27 (03) : 461 - 477
  • [35] Coastal management and sea-level rise
    Pethick, J
    CATENA, 2001, 42 (2-4) : 307 - 322
  • [36] On Sea-Level Change in Coastal Areas
    Courtillot, Vincent
    Le Mouel, Jean-Louis
    Lopes, Fernando
    Gibert, Dominique
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2022, 10 (12)
  • [37] SEA-LEVEL AT SOUTHERN-CALIFORNIA - DECADAL FLUCTUATION
    NAMIAS, J
    HUANG, JCK
    SCIENCE, 1972, 177 (4046) : 351 - &
  • [38] Western boundary circulation and coastal sea-level variability in Northern Hemisphere oceans
    Diabate, Samuel Tiefolo
    Swingedouw, Didier
    Hirschi, Joel Jean-Marie
    Duchez, Aurelie
    Leadbitter, Philip J.
    Haigh, Ivan D.
    McCarthy, Gerard D.
    OCEAN SCIENCE, 2021, 17 (05) : 1449 - 1471
  • [39] El Nino and decadal effects on sea-level variability in northern New Zealand: a wavelet analysis
    Goring, DG
    Bell, RG
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 1999, 33 (04) : 587 - 598
  • [40] CLIMATE, SEA-LEVEL RISE AND THE COASTAL ZONE - MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING FOR GLOBAL CHANGES
    PERNETTA, JC
    ELDER, DL
    OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 1992, 18 (01) : 113 - 160