Disentangling Projected Stationary Wave Changes: Implications for Future Drying of the Mediterranean Region

Published in Journal of Climate, 2025

Keller, B., C. I. Garfinkel, and E. P. Gerber, 2025: Disentangling Projected Stationary Wave Changes: Implications for Future Drying of the Mediterranean Region, J. Climate., 38, 5285-5303, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-24-0659.1.

Official version

Abstract

An intermediate-complexity general circulation model is used to disentangle changes in the large-scale zonally asymmetric circulation in response to rising greenhouse gases. Particular focus is on the anomalous ridge that develops over the Mediterranean in future climate projections, directly associated with reduced winter precipitation over the region. Specifically, we examine changes in stationary waves forced by land–sea contrast, horizontal oceanic heat fluxes, and orography, following a quadrupling of CO2. The stationary waves associated with these three drivers depend strongly on the climatological state, precluding a linear decomposition of their responses to warming. However, our modeling framework still allows a process-oriented approach to quantify the key drivers and mechanisms of the response. A combination of three similarly important mechanisms is found responsible for the rain-suppressing ridge. The first is part of a global response to warming: elongation of intermediate-scale stationary waves in response to strengthened subtropical winds aloft, previously found to account for hydroclimatic changes in southwestern North America. The second is regional: a downstream response to the North Atlantic warming hole and enhanced warming of the Eurasian landmass relative to the Atlantic Ocean. A third contribution to the Mediterranean Ridge is a phase shift of planetary wave 3, primarily associated with an altered circulation response to orographic forcing. Reduced land–sea contrast in the Mediterranean basin, previously thought to contribute substantially to Mediterranean drying, has a negligible effect in our integrations. This work offers a mechanistic analysis of the large-scale processes governing projected Mediterranean drying, lending increased understanding and credibility to climate model projections.