Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany

Precipitation during the period 2001–2016 over the northern and central part of Tuscany was studied in order to characterize the rainfall regime. The dataset consisted of hourly cumulative rainfall series recorded by a network of 801 rain gauges. The territory was divided into 30 × 30 km2 square are...

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Main Author: Alessandro Mazza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-01-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/9/2/86
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spelling doaj-a5dd1f04837540708216bae27fb69bc82020-11-24T21:25:10ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412017-01-01928610.3390/w9020086w9020086Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in TuscanyAlessandro Mazza0LaMMA Consortium, Via Madonna del Piano 10, Sesto Fiorentino 50019, ItalyPrecipitation during the period 2001–2016 over the northern and central part of Tuscany was studied in order to characterize the rainfall regime. The dataset consisted of hourly cumulative rainfall series recorded by a network of 801 rain gauges. The territory was divided into 30 × 30 km2 square areas where the annual and seasonal Average Cumulative Rainfall (ACR) and its uncertainty were estimated using the Non-Parametric Ordinary Block Kriging (NPOBK) technique. The choice of area size was a compromise that allows a satisfactory spatial resolution and an acceptable uncertainty of ACR estimates. The daily ACR was estimated using a less computationally expensive technique, averaging the cumulative rainfall measurements in the area. The trend analysis of annual and seasonal ACR time series was performed by means of the Mann–Kendall test. Four climatic zones were identified: the north-western was the rainiest, followed by the north-eastern, northcentral and south-central. An overall increase in precipitation was identified, more intense in the north-west, and determined mostly by the increase in winter precipitation. On the entire territory, the number of rainy days, mean precipitation intensity and sum of daily ACR in four intensity groups were evaluated at annual and seasonal scale. The main result was a magnitude of the ACR trend evaluated as 35 mm/year, due mainly to an increase in light and extreme precipitations. This result is in contrast with the decreasing rainfall detected in the past decades.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/9/2/86precipitation distributionextreme eventsseasonalityrain gaugekrigingstationary random functionexponential variogram modeltrend detection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandro Mazza
spellingShingle Alessandro Mazza
Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
Water
precipitation distribution
extreme events
seasonality
rain gauge
kriging
stationary random function
exponential variogram model
trend detection
author_facet Alessandro Mazza
author_sort Alessandro Mazza
title Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
title_short Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
title_full Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
title_fullStr Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
title_full_unstemmed Space–Time Characterization of Rainfall Field in Tuscany
title_sort space–time characterization of rainfall field in tuscany
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Precipitation during the period 2001–2016 over the northern and central part of Tuscany was studied in order to characterize the rainfall regime. The dataset consisted of hourly cumulative rainfall series recorded by a network of 801 rain gauges. The territory was divided into 30 × 30 km2 square areas where the annual and seasonal Average Cumulative Rainfall (ACR) and its uncertainty were estimated using the Non-Parametric Ordinary Block Kriging (NPOBK) technique. The choice of area size was a compromise that allows a satisfactory spatial resolution and an acceptable uncertainty of ACR estimates. The daily ACR was estimated using a less computationally expensive technique, averaging the cumulative rainfall measurements in the area. The trend analysis of annual and seasonal ACR time series was performed by means of the Mann–Kendall test. Four climatic zones were identified: the north-western was the rainiest, followed by the north-eastern, northcentral and south-central. An overall increase in precipitation was identified, more intense in the north-west, and determined mostly by the increase in winter precipitation. On the entire territory, the number of rainy days, mean precipitation intensity and sum of daily ACR in four intensity groups were evaluated at annual and seasonal scale. The main result was a magnitude of the ACR trend evaluated as 35 mm/year, due mainly to an increase in light and extreme precipitations. This result is in contrast with the decreasing rainfall detected in the past decades.
topic precipitation distribution
extreme events
seasonality
rain gauge
kriging
stationary random function
exponential variogram model
trend detection
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/9/2/86
work_keys_str_mv AT alessandromazza spacetimecharacterizationofrainfallfieldintuscany
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