Evolution of Mediterranean Sea water properties under climate change scenarios in the Med-CORDEX ensemble
Twenty-first century projections for the Mediterranean water properties have been analyzed using the largest ensemble of
regional climate models (RCMs) available up to now, the Med-CORDEX ensemble. It is comprised by 25 simulations, 10
historical and 15 scenario projections, from which 11 are ocean–atmosphere coupled runs and 4 are ocean forced simulations.
Three different emissions scenarios are considered: RCP8.5, RCP4.5 and RCP2.6. All the simulations agree in projecting
a warming across the entire Mediterranean basin by the end of the century as a result of the decrease of heat losses to the
atmosphere through the sea surface and an increase in the net heat input through the Strait of Gibraltar. The warming will
affect the whole water column with higher anomalies in the upper layer. The temperature change projected by the end of the
century ranges between 0.81 and 3.71 °C in the upper layer (0–150 m), between 0.82 and 2.97 °C in the intermediate layer
(150–600 m) and between 0.15 and 0.18 °C in the deep layer (600 m—bottom). The intensity of the warming is strongly
dependent on the choice of emission scenario and, in second order, on the choice of Global Circulation Model (GCM) used to
force the RCM. On the other hand, the local structures reproduced by each simulation are mainly determined by the regional
model and not by the scenario or the global model. The salinity also increases in all the simulation due to the increase of the
freshwater deficit (i.e. the excess of evaporation over precipitation and river runoff) and the related increase in the net salt
transport at the Gibraltar Strait. However, in the upper layer this process can be damped or enhanced depending upon the
characteristics of the inflowing waters from the Atlantic. This, in turn, depends on the evolution of salinity in the Northeast
Atlantic projected by the GCM. Thus a clear zonal gradient is found in most simulations with large positive salinity anomalies
in the eastern basin and a freshening of the upper layer of the western basin in most simulations. The salinity changes
projected for the whole basin range between 0 and 0.34 psu in the upper layer, between 0.08 and 0.37 psu in the intermediate
layer and between − 0.05 and 0.33 in the deep layer. These changes in the temperature and salinity modify in turn the characteristics
of the main water masses as the new waters become saltier, warmer and less dense along the twenty-first century.
There is a model consensus that the intensity of the deep water formation in the Gulf of Lions is expected to decrease in the
future. The rate of decrease remains however very uncertain depending on the scenario and model chosen. At the contrary,
there is no model consensus concerning the change in the intensity of the deep water formation in the Adriatic Sea and in
the Aegean Sea, although most models also point to a reduction.
SOTO-NAVARRO Javier;
JORDA Gabriel;
AMORES Angel;
CABOS Williams;
SOMOT Samuel;
SEVAULT Florence;
MACIAS MOY Diego;
DJURDJEVIC Vladimir;
SANNINO G.;
LI L;
SEIN Dimitri;
2020-07-15
SPRINGER
JRC118072
0930-7575 (online),
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-019-05105-4,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC118072,
10.1007/s00382-019-05105-4 (online),
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