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Arctic amplification decreases temperature variance in northern mid- to high-latitudes

Abstract

Changes in climate variability are arguably more important for society and ecosystems than changes in mean climate, especially if they translate into altered extremes1,2,3. There is a common perception and growing concern that human-induced climate change will lead to more volatile and extreme weather4. Certain types of extreme weather have increased in frequency and/or severity5,6,7, in part because of a shift in mean climate but also because of changing variability1,2,3,8,9,10. In spite of mean climate warming, an ostensibly large number of high-impact cold extremes have occurred in the Northern Hemisphere mid-latitudes over the past decade11. One explanation is that Arctic amplification—the greater warming of the Arctic compared with lower latitudes12 associated with diminishing sea ice and snow cover—is altering the polar jet stream and increasing temperature variability13,14,15,16. This study shows, however, that subseasonal cold-season temperature variability has significantly decreased over the mid- to high-latitude Northern Hemisphere in recent decades. This is partly because northerly winds and associated cold days are warming more rapidly than southerly winds and warm days, and so Arctic amplification acts to reduce subseasonal temperature variance. Previous hypotheses linking Arctic amplification to increased weather extremes invoke dynamical changes in atmospheric circulation11,13,14,15,16, which are hard to detect in present observations17,18 and highly uncertain in the future19,20. In contrast, decreases in subseasonal cold-season temperature variability, in accordance with the mechanism proposed here, are detectable in the observational record and are highly robust in twenty-first-century climate model simulations.

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Figure 1: Changing mean temperature and variability.
Figure 2: Influence of wind direction on temperature.
Figure 3: Changing influence of wind direction on temperature.
Figure 4: Modelled future changes in mean temperature and variability.
Figure 5: Modelled future changes in wind-associated temperature anomalies.

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Acknowledgements

The ERA-Interim reanalysis was produced and provided by the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts; and the HadGHCND data set by the UK Met Office Hadley Centre. The author acknowledges the World Climate Research Programme, which is responsible for the CMIP5 multi-model ensemble, and the modelling groups for producing and making available their model output. C. Huntingford is thanked for commenting on an earlier version of the manuscript; and C. Deser and L. Sun for useful discussions. This research was financially supported by the UK Natural Environment Research Council grant NE/J019585/1.

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Correspondence to James A. Screen.

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Screen, J. Arctic amplification decreases temperature variance in northern mid- to high-latitudes. Nature Clim Change 4, 577–582 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2268

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