Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California

This study presents a comprehensive assessment of the variability and trends of the precipitation and temperature along with the trends in drought indices over the State of California. The non-parametric Mann–Kendall trend test is applied with a trend-free pre-whitening procedure in trend identifica...

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Main Authors: Minxue He, Mahesh Gautam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-03-01
Series:Hydrology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/3/2/14
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spelling doaj-c50725aae1bf412cb51bf48ca6ad83262020-11-24T23:21:49ZengMDPI AGHydrology2306-53382016-03-01321410.3390/hydrology3020014hydrology3020014Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of CaliforniaMinxue He0Mahesh Gautam1Hydrology Branch, California Department of Water Resources, 3310 El Camino Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95821, USACentral Valley Flood Planning Office, California Department of Water Resources, 3464 El Camino Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95821, USAThis study presents a comprehensive assessment of the variability and trends of the precipitation and temperature along with the trends in drought indices over the State of California. The non-parametric Mann–Kendall trend test is applied with a trend-free pre-whitening procedure in trend identification. A dataset containing 120-year (water years 1896–2015) monthly precipitation, average temperature, maximum temperature, minimum temperature and the Palmer Index for seven climatic regions of the state is used for this purpose. The results confirm previous work indicating that no clear trends are observed in precipitation, while a distinct warming trend is evident in temperature over the state. New findings of this study include: (1) in general, the variability of annual, winter (December–February) and spring (March–May) precipitation shows an increasing tendency, implying intensified frequency of the occurrence of dry or wet extremes; (2) on the annual scale and in the summer, statewide meteorological, hydrological and agricultural drought indices all have decreasing trends, indicating the more frequent occurrence of drought events; and (3) among seven regions, the South Coast Drainage region generally has the most significant warming trend, as well as the most significant declining trends in drought indices. Overall, these findings are highly meaningful from both theoretical and practical perspectives, in the context of providing critical information in developing prediction models and guiding water resources management practices, respectively.http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/3/2/14variabilitytrendsprecipitationtemperaturedroughtMann–Kendall testCalifornia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Minxue He
Mahesh Gautam
spellingShingle Minxue He
Mahesh Gautam
Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
Hydrology
variability
trends
precipitation
temperature
drought
Mann–Kendall test
California
author_facet Minxue He
Mahesh Gautam
author_sort Minxue He
title Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
title_short Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
title_full Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
title_fullStr Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
title_full_unstemmed Variability and Trends in Precipitation, Temperature and Drought Indices in the State of California
title_sort variability and trends in precipitation, temperature and drought indices in the state of california
publisher MDPI AG
series Hydrology
issn 2306-5338
publishDate 2016-03-01
description This study presents a comprehensive assessment of the variability and trends of the precipitation and temperature along with the trends in drought indices over the State of California. The non-parametric Mann–Kendall trend test is applied with a trend-free pre-whitening procedure in trend identification. A dataset containing 120-year (water years 1896–2015) monthly precipitation, average temperature, maximum temperature, minimum temperature and the Palmer Index for seven climatic regions of the state is used for this purpose. The results confirm previous work indicating that no clear trends are observed in precipitation, while a distinct warming trend is evident in temperature over the state. New findings of this study include: (1) in general, the variability of annual, winter (December–February) and spring (March–May) precipitation shows an increasing tendency, implying intensified frequency of the occurrence of dry or wet extremes; (2) on the annual scale and in the summer, statewide meteorological, hydrological and agricultural drought indices all have decreasing trends, indicating the more frequent occurrence of drought events; and (3) among seven regions, the South Coast Drainage region generally has the most significant warming trend, as well as the most significant declining trends in drought indices. Overall, these findings are highly meaningful from both theoretical and practical perspectives, in the context of providing critical information in developing prediction models and guiding water resources management practices, respectively.
topic variability
trends
precipitation
temperature
drought
Mann–Kendall test
California
url http://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/3/2/14
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