荷兰瓦登海的海平面变化

IF 1.6 2区 地球科学 Q3 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
B. Vermeersen, A. Slangen, T. Gerkema, F. Baart, K. Cohen, S. Dangendorf, M. Duran-Matute, T. Frederikse, A. Grinsted, M. Hijma, S. Jevrejeva, P. Kiden, Marcel Kleinherenbrink, E. Meijles, M. Palmer, R. Rietbroek, R. Riva, E. Schulz, D. C. Slobbe, M. Simpson, P. Sterlini, P. Stocchi, R. V. D. van de Wal, M. van der Wegen
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引用次数: 37

摘要

气候变化导致的海平面上升可能对世界各地的沿海人口和生态系统造成严重后果。了解和预测海平面上升对荷兰等地势低洼的国家尤为重要。它特别适用于脆弱的生态和形态动态地区,如联合国教科文组织世界遗产地区瓦登海。在这里,我们概述了21世纪瓦登海地区的海平面预测,并简要回顾了科学数据、理解和支持预测的不确定性。海平面预测是在瓦登海地区地质历史的框架内制定的,并以政府间气候变化专门委员会第五次评估报告(IPCC AR5)中发表的区域海平面预测为基础。将IPCC第5次评估报告的预估与来自较近期文献的最新预估进行比较,并对瓦登海地区进行评估。通过纳入登海尔德和德尔夫济伊尔观测站长期测潮记录的年际变化,这些预估进一步得到了正确的认识。我们根据IPCC AR5中定义的代表性浓度路径(rcp)考虑了三种气候情景:RCP2.6情景假设温室气体(GHG)排放量在2020年后下降;RCP4.5情景假定温室气体排放在2040年达到峰值并随后下降;RCP8.5情景代表了整个21世纪温室气体排放量的持续上升。对于RCP8.5,我们还评估了最近文献中的几种情景,其中南极洲的质量损失加速速度超过IPCC AR5中提出的速度。对于荷兰瓦登海,基于IPCC ar5的预测,2018 - 2030年期间RCP4.5情景的海平面上升幅度为0.07±0.06米(不确定性为5% - 95%),RCP2.6和RCP8.5情景的海平面上升幅度分别为0.01米和0.01米。预估的2030年海平面变化率在RCP2.6情景的第5个百分位数的2.6mma−1到RCP8.5情景的第95个百分位数的9.1mma−1之间。在2018-50年期间,RCP2.6、RCP4.5和RCP8.5的预估变化分别为0.16±0.12m、0.19±0.11m和0.23±0.12m。2050年伴随的变化率在2.3 - 12.4 ma - 1之间。在2018-2100年期间,RCP2.6、RCP4.5和RCP8.5的预估总变化分别为0.41±0.25m、0.52±0.27m和0.76±0.36m。考虑到时间周期的差异,RCP8.5情景的预估比2008年三角洲委员会报告中提出的高端预估(1990-2100年0.74米)要高。2100年的海平面变化率在2.2至18.3mma−1之间。我们还评估了在RCP8.5情景下加速冰质量损失对海平面预估的影响,因为最近的文献表明,南极洲的贡献可能比IPCC AR5中提出的要大(2100年可能超过1米)。这些海平面预估中没有包括偶发性极端事件的变化,如风暴潮和(次)日时间尺度上的周期性(潮汐)贡献。然而,报告已经评估了这些过程对海平面变化速率的潜在影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sea-level change in the Dutch Wadden Sea
Abstract Rising sea levels due to climate change can have severe consequences for coastal populations and ecosystems all around the world. Understanding and projecting sea-level rise is especially important for low-lying countries such as the Netherlands. It is of specific interest for vulnerable ecological and morphodynamic regions, such as the Wadden Sea UNESCO World Heritage region. Here we provide an overview of sea-level projections for the 21st century for the Wadden Sea region and a condensed review of the scientific data, understanding and uncertainties underpinning the projections. The sea-level projections are formulated in the framework of the geological history of the Wadden Sea region and are based on the regional sea-level projections published in the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC AR5). These IPCC AR5 projections are compared against updates derived from more recent literature and evaluated for the Wadden Sea region. The projections are further put into perspective by including interannual variability based on long-term tide-gauge records from observing stations at Den Helder and Delfzijl. We consider three climate scenarios, following the Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs), as defined in IPCC AR5: the RCP2.6 scenario assumes that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions decline after 2020; the RCP4.5 scenario assumes that GHG emissions peak at 2040 and decline thereafter; and the RCP8.5 scenario represents a continued rise of GHG emissions throughout the 21st century. For RCP8.5, we also evaluate several scenarios from recent literature where the mass loss in Antarctica accelerates at rates exceeding those presented in IPCC AR5. For the Dutch Wadden Sea, the IPCC AR5-based projected sea-level rise is 0.07±0.06m for the RCP4.5 scenario for the period 2018–30 (uncertainties representing 5–95%), with the RCP2.6 and RCP8.5 scenarios projecting 0.01m less and more, respectively. The projected rates of sea-level change in 2030 range between 2.6mma−1 for the 5th percentile of the RCP2.6 scenario to 9.1mma−1 for the 95th percentile of the RCP8.5 scenario. For the period 2018–50, the differences between the scenarios increase, with projected changes of 0.16±0.12m for RCP2.6, 0.19±0.11m for RCP4.5 and 0.23±0.12m for RCP8.5. The accompanying rates of change range between 2.3 and 12.4mma−1 in 2050. The differences between the scenarios amplify for the 2018–2100 period, with projected total changes of 0.41±0.25m for RCP2.6, 0.52±0.27m for RCP4.5 and 0.76±0.36m for RCP8.5. The projections for the RCP8.5 scenario are larger than the high-end projections presented in the 2008 Delta Commission Report (0.74m for 1990–2100) when the differences in time period are considered. The sea-level change rates range from 2.2 to 18.3mma−1 for the year 2100. We also assess the effect of accelerated ice mass loss on the sea-level projections under the RCP8.5 scenario, as recent literature suggests that there may be a larger contribution from Antarctica than presented in IPCC AR5 (potentially exceeding 1m in 2100). Changes in episodic extreme events, such as storm surges, and periodic (tidal) contributions on (sub-)daily timescales, have not been included in these sea-level projections. However, the potential impacts of these processes on sea-level change rates have been assessed in the report.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
25.90%
发文量
14
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Netherlands Journal of Geosciences - Geologie en Mijnbouw is a fully open access journal which publishes papers on all aspects of geoscience, providing they are of international interest and quality. As the official publication of the ''Netherlands Journal of Geosciences'' Foundation the journal publishes new and significant research in geosciences with a regional focus on the Netherlands, the North Sea region and relevant adjacent areas. A wide range of topics within the geosciences are covered in the journal, including "geology, physical geography, geophyics, (geo-)archeology, paleontology, hydro(geo)logy, hydrocarbon exploration, modelling and visualisation." The journal is a continuation of Geologie and Mijnbouw (published by the Royal Geological and Mining Society of the Netherlands, KNGMG) and Mededelingen Nederlands Instituut voor Toegepaste Geowetenschappen (published by TNO Geological Survey of the Netherlands). The journal is published in full colour.
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