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Global Meteorological Drought: A Synthesis of Current Understanding with a Focus on SST Drivers of Precipitation Deficits

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TLDR
This article presented a synthesis of current understanding of meteorological drought, with a focus on the large-scale controls on precipitation afforded by sea surface temperature (SST anomalies), land surface feedbacks, and radiative forcings.
Abstract
Drought affects virtually every region of the world, and potential shifts in its character in a changing climate are a major concern. This article presents a synthesis of current understanding of meteorological drought, with a focus on the large-scale controls on precipitation afforded by sea surface temperature (SST anomalies), land surface feedbacks, and radiative forcings. The synthesis is primarily based on regionally-focused articles submitted to the Global Drought Information System (GDIS) collection together with new results from a suite of atmospheric general circulation model experiments intended to integrate those studies into a coherent view of drought worldwide. On interannual time scales, the preeminence of ENSO as a driver of meteorological drought throughout much of the Americas, eastern Asia, Australia, and the Maritime Continent is now well established, whereas in other regions (e.g., Europe, Africa, and India), the response to ENSO is more ephemeral or nonexistent. Northern Eurasia, central Europe, as well as central and eastern Canada stand out as regions with little SST-forced impacts on precipitation interannual time scales. Decadal changes in SST appear to be a major factor in the occurrence of long-term drought, as highlighted by apparent impacts on precipitation of the late 1990s 'climate shifts' in the Pacific and Atlantic SST. Key remaining research challenges include (i) better quantification of unforced and forced atmospheric variability as well as land/atmosphere feedbacks, (ii) better understanding of the physical basis for the leading modes of climate variability and their predictability, and (iii) quantification of the relative contributions of internal decadal SST variability and forced climate change to long-term drought.

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Will drought events become more frequent and severe in Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, a combined indicator based on the predominance of the drought signal over normal/wet conditions has been used to investigate changes in drought occurrence, frequency, and severity in Europe in the next decades.

Hot days induced by precipitation deficits at the global scale

TL;DR: It is found that wide areas of the world display a strong relationship between the number of hot days in the regions’ hottest month and preceding precipitation deficits, and effects of soil moisture-temperature coupling are geographically more widespread than commonly assumed.
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The 2010–2015 megadrought in central Chile: impacts on regional hydroclimate and vegetation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the nature and biophysical impacts of the megadrought in central Chile and reported some of the measures taken by the central government to relieve the effects and the public perception of this event.
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The Central Chile Mega Drought (2010‐2018): A Climate dynamics perspective

TL;DR: The authors in this paper showed that the exceptional length of the mega-drought in central Chile is due to the prevalence of a circulation dipole-hindering the passage of extratropical storms over central Chile, characterized by deep tropospheric anticyclonic anomalies over the subtropical Pacific and cyclonic over the Amundsen-Bellingshausen Sea.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Global analyses of sea surface temperature, sea ice, and night marine air temperature since the late nineteenth century

TL;DR: HadISST1 as mentioned in this paper replaces the global sea ice and sea surface temperature (GISST) data sets and is a unique combination of monthly globally complete fields of SST and sea ice concentration on a 1° latitude-longitude grid from 1871.
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Decadal Trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: Regional Temperatures and Precipitation

TL;DR: An evaluation of the atmospheric moisture budget reveals coherent large-scale changes since 1980 that are linked to recent dry conditions over southern Europe and the Mediterranean, whereas northern Europe and parts of Scandinavia have generally experienced wetter than normal conditions.
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A Multiscalar Drought Index Sensitive to Global Warming: The Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index

TL;DR: In this article, a new climatic drought index, the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI), is proposed, which combines multiscalar character with the capacity to include the effects of temperature variability on drought assessment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Land Data Assimilation System

TL;DR: The Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS) as mentioned in this paper is an uncoupled land surface modeling system that drives multiple models, integrates a huge quantity of observation-based data, runs globally at high resolution (0.25°), and produces results in near-real time (typically within 48 h of the present).
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Global and Regional Scale Precipitation Patterns Associated with the El Niño/Southern Oscillation

TL;DR: In this article, the amplitude and phase of the Arm harmonic fitted to the 24-month composite values are plotted in the form of a vector for each station, which reveals both the regions of spatially coherent ENSO-related precipitation and the phase of this signal in relation to the evolution of the composite episode.
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