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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-03-01
    Description: Climate research in Portugal is often constrained by the lack of homogeneous, temporally and spatially consistent, and long-term climatic series. To overcome this limitation, the authors developed new high-resolution gridded datasets (~1 km) of daily mean, minimum, and maximum air temperatures over Portugal (1950–2015, 66 yr), based on gridded daily temperatures (E-OBS) at ~25-km spatial resolution. A two-step approach was followed, under the assumption that daily temperature variability in Portugal is mainly controlled by atmospheric large-scale forcing, while local processes are mostly expressed as strong spatial gradients. First, monthly baseline (1971–2000) patterns were estimated at 1-km grid resolution by applying multivariate linear regressions (exploratory variables: elevation, latitude, and distance to coastline). A kriging of residuals from baseline normals of 36 weather stations was applied for bias corrections. Second, bilinearly interpolated daily temperature anomalies were then added to the daily baseline patterns to obtain the final datasets. The method performance was evaluated using fivefold cross-validations. The datasets were also validated using daily temperatures from 23 stations not incorporated in E-OBS. A climatological analysis based on these datasets was carried out, highlighting spatial heterogeneities, seasonality, long-term trends, interannual variability, and extremes. The spatial and temporal variability is generally coherent with previous studies at coarser resolutions. An overall warming trend is apparent for all variables and indices, but showing different strengths and spatial variability. These datasets show important advantages over preexisting data, including more detailed and accurate information on trends and interannual variability of precipitation extremes, and can thus be applied to several areas of research in Portugal, such as hydrology, ecology, agriculture, and forestry.
    Print ISSN: 1558-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1558-8432
    Topics: Geography , Physics
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