GC41E-1132
30,000 years of hydroclimatic variability in the coastal southwest United States: regional synthesis and forcings analysis.
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Matthew E Kirby, California State University Fullerton, Fullerton, CA, United States
Abstract:
The coastal southwest United States is characterized by a winter dominated hydroclimate. Far from dependable, this region’s supply of winter precipitation is highly variable and often characterized by hydrologic opposites – droughts and floods. Predicting future precipitation and hydrologic dynamics requires a paleoperspective. Here, we present an up-to-date synthesis of hydroclimatic variability over the past 30,000 years. A variety of terrestrial-based studies are examined and compared to understand patterns of regional hydroclimatic change. This comparison is extended into the San Joaquin Basin of California where future climate change will impact the region’s agricultural stability and economy. Particularly interesting is the apparent role that Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs) play in modulating the region’s hydroclimate over a variety of timescales. Are past periods of above average Pacific SSTs analogs for future global warming? If yes, the region might expect an increase in winter precipitation as SSTs rise in response to global warming. However, how this potential precipitation increase is manifest is unknown. For example, will the intensity of precipitation events increase and thus present increased flood hazards and diminished freshwater capture? Finally, we present evidence for changes in the source of winter precipitation over time as well as ecological responses to past hydrologic change.