Abstract
Abstract. The Mediterranean region is one of the most sensitive regions to anthropogenic and climatic changes, mostly affecting its water resources and related practices. With multiple studies raising serious concerns about climate shifts and aridity expansion in the region, this one aims to establish a new high-resolution classification for hydrology purposes based on Mediterranean-specific climate indices. This classification is useful in following up on hydrological (water resource management, floods, droughts, etc.) and ecohydrological applications such as Mediterranean agriculture. Olive cultivation is the characteristic agricultural practice of the Mediterranean region. The proposed approach includes the use of classic climatic indices and the definition of new climatic indices, mainly precipitation seasonality index Is or evapotranspiration threshold SPET, both in line with river flow regimes, a principal component analysis to reduce the number of indices, K-means classification to distribute them into classes, and finally the construction of a decision tree based on the distances to class kernels to reproduce the classification without having to repeat the whole process. The classification was set and validated by WorldClim-2 at 1 km high-resolution gridded data for the 1970–2000 baseline period and 144 stations' data over 30 to 120 years, both at monthly time steps. Climatic classes coincided with a geographical distribution in the Mediterranean ranging from the most seasonal and driest class 1 in the south to the least seasonal and most humid class 5 in the north, showing the climatic continuity from one place to another and enhancing the visibility of change trends. The MED-CORDEX ALADIN and CCLM historical and projected data at 12 and 50 km resolution simulated under the RCP4.5 and 8.5 scenarios for the 2070–2100 period served to assess the climate change impact on this classification by superimposing the projected changes on the baseline grid-based classification. RCP scenarios increase the seasonality index Is by +80 % and the aridity index IArid by +60 % in the north and IArid by +10 % without Is change in the south, hence causing the wet season shortening and river regime modification with the migration north of moderate and extreme winter regimes instead of early spring regimes. The ALADIN and CCLM regional climate models (RCMs) have demonstrated an evolution of the Mediterranean region towards arid climate. The classes located to the north are slowly evolving towards moderate coastal classes, which might affect hydrologic regimes due to shorter humid seasons and earlier snowmelts. These scenarios might look favourable for Mediterranean cultivation; however, the expected impact on water resources and flow regimes will surely expand and directly hit ecosystems, food, health, and tourism, as risk is interconnected between domains. This kind of classification might be reproduced at the global scale, using the same or other climatic indices specific to each region, highlighting their physiographic characteristics and hydrological responses.
Highlights
Mediterranean climate is a result of a complicated global cyclonic system swiping a large evaporative basin
The objective of this study is first to establish a Mediterranean-specific climatic classification for hydrology purposes based on a set of indices, mainly seasonality and aridity, and second to estimate the future evolution of this classification based on Radiative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios with an easy follow-up tool using olive cultivation evolution in the Mediterranean
The number of indices was reduced the first time based on the correlation matrix and the second based on principal component analysis (PCA) results
Summary
Mediterranean climate is a result of a complicated global cyclonic system swiping a large evaporative basin. During the positive phases of the NAO, oceanic disturbances bring the most humid to northern Europe and the less humid to northern Africa and the Middle East (Douguédroit and Lionello, 2015) This continuous alternation of high- and low-pressure, cold and humid winters followed by hot and dry summers marks the Mediterranean seasonality, which makes the region attractive for social activities, its sensitivity to climate change and anthropogenic pressures (PlanBleu, 2012). A north–south general precipitation and evapotranspiration gradient has been identified in Tunisia through the analysis of directional variograms that results from partial gradients evolving through seasons (Slimani et al, 2007; Baccour et al, 2012; Feki et al, 2012) These spatial gradients mainly depend on topographic structures through the interception of rainfall-generating air masses. At 1.5 ◦C global warming, some Mediterranean areas are under aridification while moving to drier states due to the decrease in precipitation combined with a potential evapotranspiration (PET) increase leading to an expansion of drylands, affecting more people (Koutroulis, 2019)
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