Oceans may provide clues to future rainfall – University of Reading
24 October 2008Changes in the salinity of our oceans are being brought about by man's influence on our climate, suggests new research conducted by the Met Office Hadley Centre and the Walker Institute for Climate System Research at the University of Reading, to be published in Geophysical Research Letters next month.
Using data from the Atlantic Ocean and Met Office climate model simulations, the study reveals increasing salinity in the sub-tropical zone — an indication of less rainfall and increased evaporation. This mirrors decreased rainfall over land areas in the same latitudes identified in previous research in 2007, attributing this to human activity.
Saltiness of the oceans can help us to understand what the likely drying and droughts on land might be in the future. Peter Stott, head of climate monitoring and attribution at the Met Office and leader of the study, explains: "Knowing how our oceans are changing over what are essentially vast data-sparse areas is important. It provides us with a window on changes in the hydrological cycle and gives us more certainty in projections of rainfall as the climate changes. In our region, for instance, this research could help us to refine projections of summer drying extending out from the Mediterranean basin."
Co-author Professor Rowan Sutton of the Walker Institute for Climate System Research at University of Reading said: "The freshening of polar waters in the Atlantic, which has raised fears about a collapse of the warm Gulf Stream current, leading to a significantly colder climate for Europe, looks not to be related to increasing greenhouse gases, but natural variability."
The scientists used a Met Office climate model to simulate variations in the Atlantic Ocean. In the north Atlantic recent freshening, recorded before 2003, has been reversed. These changes could be because of natural variability. However, in the sub-tropics where the increased salinity was found to be outside natural variability, the changes could only be attributed to human-induced global warming.
ENDS
For further information contact Met Office Press Office 01392 886655 or email @metoffice.gov.ukpressoffice or University of Reading press office on 0118 378 7388 or media@reading.ac.uk
Notes to editors:
• The Met Office is the UK's National Weather Service, providing 24x7 world-renowned scientific excellence in weather, climate and environmental forecasts and severe weather warnings for the protection of life and property.
• The Met Office Hadley Centre is the UK's foremost centre for climate change research. Partly funded by Defra (the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), the newly-established Dept for Energy and Climate Change and the Ministry of Defence it provides information to and advice to the UK Government on climate change issues.
• The Walker Institute for Climate System Research was established at the University of Reading in 2006. It draws together a number of internationally renowned climate system research groups and centres with expertise across a wide range of core disciplines central to climate system science. Our vision is to be a leader in integrated climate system research in order to deliver better knowledge and understanding of future climate and its impacts for the benefit of society.
www.walker-institute.ac.uk
• Professor Rowan Sutton is a Royal Society Research Fellow in the Climate Division of the UK National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) based in the Department of Meteorology at the University of Reading. He is also a member of the Walker Institute for Climate System Research at the University of Reading. He is the Climate System Theme Leader at NERC, Head of the Atlantic-European Climate Group and Member of the World Climate Research Programme CLIVAR Atlantic Panel.