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Journal Article

Rising mean and extreme near‐surface air temperature across Nepal

Authors

Karki,  Ramchandra
External Organizations;

ul Hasson,  Shabeh
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/lgerlitz

Gerlitz,  Lars
4.4 Hydrology, 4.0 Geosystems, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Talchabhadel,  Rocky
External Organizations;

Schickhoff,  Udo
External Organizations;

Scholten,  Thomas
External Organizations;

Böhner,  Jürgen
External Organizations;

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Citation

Karki, R., ul Hasson, S., Gerlitz, L., Talchabhadel, R., Schickhoff, U., Scholten, T., Böhner, J. (2020): Rising mean and extreme near‐surface air temperature across Nepal. - International Journal of Climatology, 40, 4, 2445-2463.
https://doi.org/10.1002/joc.6344


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_4883888
Abstract
Owing to unique topographic and ecological diversity, central Himalayan state of Nepal is exposed to adverse impacts of climate change and associated disasters. However, countrywide historical assessment of mean and extreme temperature changes, a prerequisite for devising adequate adaptation strategies, is still lacking. Here, we present a comprehensive picture of mean and extreme temperature trends across Nepal over the 1980–2016 period, based on high‐quality daily temperature observations from 46 stations. Our results suggest that besides winter cooling in southern lowlands, the country features a widespread warming, which is higher for maximum temperature (~0.04°C⋅year−1) than for minimum temperature (~0.02°C⋅year−1), over the mountainous region than in valleys and lowlands and during the pre‐monsoon season than for the rest of the year. Consistently, we found a higher increasing trend for warm days (13 days⋅decade−1) than for warm nights (4 days⋅decade−1), whereas the rates of decrease for cold days and cold nights are the same (6 days⋅decade−1). Further investigations reveal that pronounced warming in maximum temperature over mountain regions can be attributed to less cloud cover and snowfall in recent decades during non‐monsoon seasons as a result of positive geopotential height anomalies and strengthening of anticyclonic circulations in the mid‐to‐upper troposphere. Similarly, increased stability of lower atmosphere during winter and post‐monsoon seasons caused prolonged and frequent periods of fog over lowlands, resulting in significant winter cooling there.