Upper Bounds of Maximum Land Surface Temperatures in a Warming Climate and Limits to Plant Growth
Open access
Date
2023-09Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Extremely high land surface temperatures affect soil ecological processes, alter land-atmosphere interactions, and may limit some forms of life. Extreme surface temperature hotspots are presently identified using satellite observations or deduced from complex Earth system models. We introduce a simple, yet physically based analytical approach that incorporates salient land characteristics and atmospheric conditions to globally identify locations of extreme surface temperatures and their upper bounds. We then provide a predictive tool for delineating the spatial extent of land hotspots at the limits to biological adaptability. The model is in good agreement with satellite observations showing that temperature hotspots are associated with high radiation and low wind speed and occur primarily in Middle East and North Africa, with maximum temperatures exceeding 85°C during the study period from 2005 to 2020. We observed an increasing trend in maximum surface temperatures at a rate of 0.17°C/decade. The model allows quantifying how upper bounds of extreme temperatures can increase in a warming climate in the future for which we do not have satellite observations and offers new insights on potential impacts of future warming on limits to plant growth and biological adaptability. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000631341Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Earth's FutureVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Geophysical UnionFunding
101086179 - AI4SoilHealth: Accelerating collection and use of soil health information using AI technology to support (SBFI)
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