Abstract

In the context of climate change, the study of the variability of the climatic extremes in several regions of the world is of capital importance. This study has as main objective to analyze the variability of extreme temperature events in the Beninese basin of the Niger River for the recent and the near future. To achieve this objective, seven (07) extreme temperature indices based on historical daily temperature observations (1976 to 2019) and REMO RCM simulation outputs of RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios (2021-2050) were calculated. The obtained results were represented by calculating the means for each index and analyzing the trends and their significance by the Mann-Kendall method. The results show that the indices of extreme temperature intensity (TNn, TXx, and DTR), and those related to the frequency of warm sequences (WSDI, TN90p and TX90p) have experienced a significant increase in the past. This increase will continue until 2050. In contrast, the cold sequence frequency index (CSDI) decrease over the historical period as well as over the future period. These indices show much more change with the RCP8.5 scenario than with the RCP4.5 of the REMO climate model. Only the TXx and CSDI indices show statistically significant changes at all stations.

Highlights

  • Climate is a very complex part of the Earth’s “system” (Saurwein, 2016)

  • Seven (07) extreme temperature indices based on historical daily temperature observations (1976 to 2019) and REMO RCM simulation outputs of RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios (2021-2050) were calculated

  • The results show that the indices of extreme temperature intensity (TNn, TXx, and daytime temperature (DTR)), and those related to the frequency of warm sequences (WSDI, TN90p and TX90p) have experienced a significant increase in the past

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Summary

Introduction

Climate is a very complex part of the Earth’s “system” (Saurwein, 2016). Deforestation and species extinction are relatively more important and living conditions have become more precarious especially in tropical Africa (Bush & Flenley, 2007). This area, whose economy is essentially based on agriculture, is not without sensitivity (IPCC, 2007)

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