Climate variations and changes in extreme climate events in Russia

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Abstract

Daily temperature (mean, minimum and maximum) and atmospheric precipitation data from 857 stations are used to analyze variations in the space-time distribution of extreme temperatures and precipitation across Russia during the past six decades. The seasonal numbers of days (N) when daily air temperatures (diurnal temperature range, precipitation) were higher or lower than selected thresholds are used as indices of climatic extremes. Linear trends in N are calculated for each station for the time period of interest. The seasonal numbers of days (foreach season) with maximum temperatures higher than the 95th percentile have increased over most of Russia, with minimum temperatures lower than the 5th percentile having decreased. Atendency for the decrease in the number of days with abnormally high diurnal temperature range is observed over most of Russia. In individual regions of Russia, however, a tendency for an increasing number of days with a large diurnal amplitude is found. The largest tendency for increasing number of days with heavy precipitation is observed in winter in Western Siberia and Yakutia. © IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Bulygina, O. N., Razuvaev, V. N., Korshunova, N. N., & Groisman, P. Y. (2007). Climate variations and changes in extreme climate events in Russia. Environmental Research Letters, 2(4). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/2/4/045020

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