Abstract

A new quality-checked and homogenised dataset of total cloud cover (TCC) series over Italy for the period 1951–2018 is presented and the variability and trends of the obtained regional series is discussed. The diurnal cycle highlights the relevant role of convection induced by solar radiation that, as expected, is more relevant at medium and high elevations and in summer. In parallel, the annual cycle presents a strong minimum in July and a maximum during winter for southern Italy, while it exhibits a more complex behaviour with strong differences between low elevations and high elevations in northern Italy. Moreover, the seasonal and annual TCC series are characterized by a significant negative trend over the whole considered period, which is mainly due to the 1951–1990 period. Even if small differences between northern and southern Italy can be observed, the two regions exhibit a coherent behaviour both for long-term trends and decadal time-scale variability suggesting that the causes of variability and trends of the Italian TCC records are more related to large scale factors rather than to local scale changes. Indeed, the comparison with sea level pressure and 500 hPa geopotential height data highlights that large-scale atmospheric circulation explains a relevant fraction of the signal of the Italian TCC records. Finally, the new TCC dataset shows that the long-term evolution of sunshine duration and surface solar radiation in Italy is only partially influenced by changes in TCC.

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