Hobday, AJ, Oliver, E, Sen Gupta, A, Benthuysen, JA, Burrows, MT, Donat, MG, Holbrook, NJ, Moore, PJ, Thomsen, MS, Wernberg, T and Smale, DA 2018 Categorizing and Naming Marine Heatwaves. Oceanography, 31 (2). https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2018.205
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Hobday et al. MHW categories revised clean_ACCEPTED.docx - Accepted Version Available under License All Rights Reserved. Download (5MB) |
Abstract/Summary
Considerable attention has been directed at understanding the conse-quences and impacts of long-term anthropogenic climate change. Discrete, climati-cally extreme events such as cyclones, floods, and heatwaves can also significantly affect regional environments and species, including humans. Climate change is expected to intensify these events and thus exacerbate their effects. Climatic extremes also occur in the ocean, and recent decades have seen many high-impact marine heatwaves (MHWs)—anomalously warm water events that may last many months and extend over thousands of square kilometers. A range of biological, economic, and political impacts have been associated with the more intense MHWs, and measuring the sever-ity of these phenomena is becoming more important. Progress in understanding and public awareness will be facilitated by consistent description of these events. Here, we propose a detailed categorization scheme for MHWs that builds on a recently published classification, combining elements from schemes that describe atmospheric heatwaves and hurricanes. Category I, II, III, and IV MHWs are defined based on the degree to which temperatures exceed the local climatology and illustrated for 10 MHWs. While there is a long-term increase in the occurrence frequency of all MHW categories, the largest trend is a 24% increase in the area of the ocean where strong (Category II) MHWs occur. Use of this scheme can help explain why biological impacts associated with different MHWs can vary widely and provides a consistent way to compare events. We also propose a simple naming convention based on geography and year that would further enhance scientific and public awareness of these marine events.
Item Type: | Publication - Article |
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Divisions: | Marine Biological Association of the UK > Ocean Biology |
Depositing User: | Barbara Bultmann |
Date made live: | 07 May 2019 12:21 |
Last Modified: | 09 Feb 2024 16:51 |
URI: | https://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/8185 |
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